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Colonial Collections Consortium

The Colonial Collections DataHub is a project of the Colonial Collections Consortium. The consortium is a partnership between five organizations with expertise in the field of colonial collections.

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Object

BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI

Data provider objectWereldmuseum, Leiden
MetadataLocal Contexts NoticesProvenanceData provider

Metadata

Title

A title or name given to the object by its current holder.
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI
Provided by Wereldmuseum

Description

A description of the object, its features or context.
In het boekje van H.J.E.F. Schwartz: Gids voor den bezoeker van de etnografische verzameling; Zaal B Bali en Lombok, Batavia 1920 vond ik op p.9 de oplossing voor de ilen-ilen batara: een beschrijving en foto’s van een groep “Poppen, wayangfiguren voorstellende, deel uitmakend van een volledig stel,...
Provided by Wereldmuseum

Location of creation

The location, region or part of the world where the object is from.
Bali (Indonesia)
Bali (Indonesia)
Provided by Wereldmuseum

Materials

What kind of materials the object consists of. Click on the i of the material to learn more.
wood
copper alloy
Provided by Wereldmuseum

Date made

When was the object made? Could be an exact date or a range.
No start date – Jan 1, 1933
Provided by Wereldmuseum

Types

A name for the type or kind of object given by the current holder.
statues of deities
Provided by Wereldmuseum

Techniques

No Techniques available

Creators

No Creators available

Inscriptions

No Inscriptions available
License:
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0)
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI #1
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI #1
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI #1
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI #2
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI #2
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI #2
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI #3
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI #3
BEELD VAN CHINESE KEPENG-MUNTEN, VERMOEDELIJK VOORSTELLENDE DEWI UTARI #3

Data provider object

The data of this object is provided by:

Wereldmuseum
Steenstraat 1
2312 BS Leiden
Netherlands

Website
http://www.wereldculturen.nl
Reference or object ID by the the data provider
TM-809-198b
More about the dataset (Dataset Browser)

Provenance

Provenance information shows the trail an object has made before it came at the current location. It can contain information about previous owners to technical processing information. This provenance data is often incomplete.

Provenance data table

No date
Transferred from Charles Sayers
Provided by Wereldmuseum
Transferred from Charles Sayers
Provided by Wereldmuseum
Transferred from O. (Olga) Sayers-Stern
Provided by Wereldmuseum
Jan 1, 1933 – Jan 1, 1959
Transferred from Charles Sayers
Provided by Wereldmuseum

Local Contexts Notices

The Local Contexts Collections Care (CC) Notices are visible identifiers developed specifically for institutions and repositories to support proper cultural care and stewardship of collections, led and guided by Indigenous protocols and authority. Learn more about the Local Contexts Collections Care Notices..

Belonging

Belonging
The Belonging Notice is being used to indicate that only specific persons belonging to communities, Tribes, Clans, and societies have the right to access and handle these specific items or collections.
Logo local context
This sacred belonging is pratimā, a religious representation of Ida Batara Rambut Sedana, the Balinese god of prosperity and wealth, and a manifestation of Sang Hyang Widhi Wasa, the Supreme God. Made from Chinese kepeng coins believed to hold magical properties, the pratimā is typically enshrined in a gedong, a sacred pavilion within temple compounds. Ritual ceremonies are held to honour the deity, express gratitude, and seek blessings. It is believed that during these ceremonies, the god may become temporarily present through a spiritual medium, with the pratimā serving as a divine residence, thus enabling the transmission of blessings to devotees (Focus Group Discussion with the Balinese community, 1 May 2025).
English
Provided by FGD Bali
On behalf of Bali community
On May 26, 2025

Attribution Incomplete

Attribution Incomplete
Collections and items in our institution have incomplete, inaccurate, and/or missing attribution. We are using this notice to clearly identify this material so that it can be updated, or corrected by communities of origin. Our institution is committed to collaboration and partnerships to address this problem of incorrect or missing attribution.
Logo local context
Provided by Colonial Collections Consortium
This is a standard Notice added to each object to indicate an incomplete, incorrect and/or missing attribution.