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'Soul
Catcher' Amulet
Tlingit (probably Tantakwan, Southern Tlingit) Hollowed and relief-carved bear femur with abalone shell inlay and attached leather thong, ca. 1850-1870, 6" Long Jeffrey Myers The descriptive name 'soul catcher' has been given to this particular symmetrical form of shaman's amulet, which were most often carved of bone, said to be the femur or leg bone of a coastal brown or interior grizzly bear. Most bone soul catcher amulets were made for and used by Tsimshian shamans, though examples of these objects have also been collected among the Tlingit, Haida, and Bella Bella as well. This particular amulet has characteristics that suggest Tlingit manufacture, particularly from among the most southerly group of Tlingit speakers, the Tantakwan of southern Southeast Alaska. The somewhat naturalistic form of the small bear image in the center of the amulet is especially Tlingit in character, and the bear was an important emblem of the Teiqweidí clan of the Tantakwan (southern Tlingit). The relief-carved profile heads on either end of the amulet also appear to represent bears, and the abalone shell inlaid as teeth brings the power of this valuable sea creature to bear in the usage of the amulet. Soul catcher imagery varies from one example to another, and includes the representation of wolves, bears, whales, and sometimes human figures in the central position on the amulet. Only a few examples feature the use of abalone shell inlay as seen in this ornately decorated amulet. Soul catchers are so called because of their historically described use in the recovery of 'lost souls'. Loss of one's soul or spirit is said to be the cause of illness and disorientation manifested in the life of an individual. Shamans wore these amulets around their necks, and were employed to journey to the 'land of the dead' in order to locate the lost spirit and return it to the patient in order to restore their health and well being. The recovered soul is sucked into the tubular amulet and captured there with the insertion of cedar bark plugs in each end. Only a very small number of these amulets have retained these shredded bark end plugs. |