Ironworking in Africa began twenty-three to twenty-four
hundred years ago, in a number of widely spread areas
of Sub-Saharan Africa. The complex technology of the craft
may have been discovered in these different areas, or
it may have been imported from North Africa or from Egypt.
In any case, the use of iron spread rapidly among the
various people in the vastness of Sub-Saharan Africa.
The ,
,
, and other objects that were created were diverse and
unique, and reflected local stylistic traditions as well
as the blacksmith’s skill and imagination. The people
who used these tools understood that the blacksmith had
not only a great understanding of the complexities or
iron technology, but also had a magical power to combine
craft and art in order to produce these objects.
In 1999, a collection of metalworking objects was acquired
by the CANADIAN MUSEUM OF MAKING, in order to continue to preserve the pieces.
Since then, we have added many pieces and now have nearly
300 objects in the museum. We have carefully documented
and preserved the tools, and in doing so, we hope to tell
a story about the person or people who created and used
them.