Mace
Item number Sf518 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number Sf518 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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A metal mace (head only) with four conical spikes (originally had five) radiating from a short central cylinder.
Pre-Conquest, before 1532 C.E. Possibly Vicus Style, 200 B.C.E.-300 C.E. Mace heads were mounted on wooden handles and used as weapons. Maces with star-shaped heads are frequently depicted on Moche ceramics. Archaeological examples also come from Vicus, a contemporary site in the far north area (Lumbreras). The Spanish chroniclers also picture the Incas, a much later culture, bearing star maces.
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Pre-Conquest, before 1532 C.E. Possibly Vicus Style, 200 B.C.E.-300 C.E. Mace heads were mounted on wooden handles and used as weapons. Maces with star-shaped heads are frequently depicted on Moche ceramics. Archaeological examples also come from Vicus, a contemporary site in the far north area (Lumbreras). The Spanish chroniclers also picture the Incas, a much later culture, bearing star maces.
A metal mace (head only) with four conical spikes (originally had five) radiating from a short central cylinder.
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