*West African Tribal Dagger with Crocodile-Skin Grip and Cowrie-Decorated Sheath*
Overall length: 37 cm
Blade length: 21 cm
A distinctive and authentic West African tribal dagger, featuring a hand-forged tapering steel blade with age patina and oxidation. The blade is incised with simple “X” and linear markings, likely personal or talismanic rather than formal maker’s stamps.
The hilt is bound in leather and finished with a pommel of crocodile or lizard skin — a traditional material believed to confer protective and spiritual power. The dagger is housed in its original leather-over-wood sheath, decorated with cross-hatched tooling to the front and mounted with a cowrie shell flanked by striped glass trade beads. The reverse is stitched with a plaited decorative seam and fitted with a leather belt loop for suspension.
Historical Note:
Daggers of this type were carried widely across the Upper Guinea Coast of West Africa (Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea interior), particularly among the Mande-speaking peoples (Mende, Temne, Malinke, Susu). Beyond their practical use, such weapons served as cultural status objects, imbued with symbolic and spiritual significance.
- Cowrie shells were a pan-African symbol of wealth, fertility, and spiritual protection, used both ornamentally and as currency.
- Glass trade beads, particularly striped monochrome beads, entered the region through 19th–20th century European coastal trade and were incorporated into traditional regalia.
- Crocodile or lizard skin was believed to provide protective strength to the bearer.
- Incised blade markings of simple lines or “X” motifs are often found on West African smith-made weapons, serving as charms, ownership marks, or symbolic devices.






























