Nr. 101644230

Egy kőszobor - Adan - Ghána (Nincs minimálár)
Nr. 101644230

Egy kőszobor - Adan - Ghána (Nincs minimálár)
An Adan rider stone sculpture, carved from a dense igneous or sedimentary stone, the rider is rendered fully in the round. The composition emphasizes frontal orientation and axial symmetry: the mounted figure sits erect upon a proportionally compact horse, the rider’s torso is cylindrical and columnar no head and the arms are only implied.
This equestrian stone sculpture is attributed to the Adan cultural horizon of northern Ghana, conventionally dated between the eleventh and fifteenth centuries CE. The corpus of Adan stone figures—comprising mounted warriors, standing figures, and zoomorphic forms—has been recovered primarily from the Middle Niger–Volta basin and is associated archaeologically with settlement mounds, shrine sites, and mortuary contexts. Although precise cultural affiliations remain debated, the sculptures are generally understood to reflect the political and ritual formations that preceded or intersected with early centralized polities in the region.
The equestrian motif is of particular iconographic significance. In the savanna zones of West Africa, horsemanship historically functioned as a marker of political authority, martial capacity, and long-distance exchange. The horse, an introduced and prestige-bearing animal, indexed trans-Sahelian connections and elite status. Within the Adan sculptural corpus, the mounted figure likely encoded ideals of leadership and protection, whether ancestral, chiefly, or warrior-based. The sculpture operates as a typological image of power—an embodiment of rank and cosmological mediation.
Surface weathering and mineral accretions attest to prolonged exposure, whether in situ or through ritual deposition. Many Adan stones were found partially buried, suggesting intentional emplacement at shrines or graves, where they may have functioned as territorial markers, commemorative monuments, or intercessory presences. The durability of stone, in contrast to the predominance of wood in later regional traditions, implies a deliberate investment in permanence and ancestral continuity.
Formally, the sculpture’s reductive geometry—block-like volumes, abbreviated limbs, and schematic detailing—signals a conceptual approach to figuration that privileges symbolic clarity over anatomical verisimilitude. The compression of horse and rider into an integrated mass generates a unified vertical thrust, reinforcing the monumentality of even modestly scaled examples. Such works challenge art-historical narratives that marginalize sub-Sahelian stone traditions, instead foregrounding a sophisticated sculptural language rooted in local cosmologies and regional exchange networks.
As an object of archaeological and art-historical inquiry, the Adan rider occupies a pivotal position in reconstructing the visual and political landscapes of premodern northern Ghana. It materializes the intersections of mobility, authority, and memory within the Middle Niger–Volta world, standing as both a marker of territorial presence and a durable sign of transcendent power.
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