Akua-ta - Tongan club
Date1770s
Object number00046676
NameClub
MediumWood
DimensionsOverall: 1150 x 118 x 70 mm
ClassificationsCeremonial artefact
Credit LineANMM Collection Purchased with the assistance of the Australian Government through the National Cultural Heritage Account
Collections
DescriptionAn Tongan Akua-ta or carved wooden club collected in October 1773 at Tongatapu during Captain Cook's second voyage and brought to England aboard HMS ADVENTURE, captained by Tobias Furneaux. Preserved in Furneaux family for over 200 years and known by them as 'Omai's relics'.
Remarkable in its provenance, this club is representative of the trade which serviced the needs of explorers and indigenous people alike during the great epoch of Pacific exploration, as well as the European vogue for artificial curiosities. Associated directly with Tobias Furneaux, it has further strong connections to Omai and Cook and other great English society personalities from the age of exploration..HistoryTobias Furneaux was captain of HMS ADVENTURE and accompanied Cook (HMS RESOLUTION) on his second voyage of exploration (1772 - 1775). It was during this voyage on the 11 March 1773 that Furneaux watered his ship at Bruny Island (Tasmania) at a place now known as Adventure Bay. The purpose of the voyage was to search the southern ocean for Terra Australis Incognita. Cook's ships spent considerable time in testing conditions in high southern latitudes, punctuated by periods of respite in Polynesia. It was during these later visits to the Pacific islands that the Polynesian Omai joined the ADVENTURE when Cook's expedition anchored at Fare Harbour on the island of Huahine for four days (3-7 September 1773). Cook described Omai: "...this man had been on board the Adventure from the first hour of her arrival at the island, it being known to all the natives that he intended to go away with us, without being demanded and as Captain Furneaux being desirous of keeping him, I did not think it necessary to send him on shore ..." [The Journals of Captain James Cook on his Voyages of Discovery, The Voyage of the Resolution and Adventure 1772-1775, JC Beaglehole (Ed), The Boydell Press, p.221]
After leaving Huahine, the RESOLUTION and ADVENTURE visited the neighbouring island of Raiatea (Ulietea) before sailing to the Tongan archipelago (Friendly Isles) where the ships anchored at Eua island (2 Oct)and Tongatapu (3 - 7 Oct 1773). Included in a general description of Tongan culture and customs Cook decribed their clubs: "From the high cultivated state of the isles and the friendly manner we were received by these islanders one may venture to conjector that they are seldom disturbed by either domistick or foreign troubles, they are however not without arms, such as Bows and Arrows, Spears, Darts and clubs, these last are from 3 to 5 or 6 feet long and of various shapes - some having square ends others flatish, others like paddles, Spades etc they are all made with surprising neatness, and of the hard wood which is common in all the isles". [The Journals of Captain James Cook on his Voyages of Discovery, The Voyage of the Resolution and Adventure 1772-1775, JC Beaglehole (Ed), The Boydell Press, p.273]
From Tongatapu the ships sailed for Queen Charlotte Sound in New Zealand but became separated by a gale before they could enter Cook Strait. The RESOLUTION finally anchored at Ship Cove in Princess Charlotte Sound on 3 November (1773) where Cook waited for the ADVENTURE until 24 November. As Furneaux had not arrived, Cook left a message in a bottle buried with signs for Furneaux to find it and then departed for a further sweep of the Pacific. The ADVENTURE arrived at Ship Cove six days after Cook had departed.
Furneaux then set about replenishing the ADVENTURE and readying the ship to rendezvous with Cook at either Easter Island or Tahiti later in the year. However, these plans were changed when a boat party sent ashore to collect 'wild greens' (antiscorboutics) was horribly massacred on 17 December. Deeply influenced by this event, Furneaux decided to sail for England and departed Princess Charlotte Sound on 23 December. The ADVENTURE returned to England by Cape Horn and Cape Town and arrived in England in July 1774.
Omai (pronounced My) is undoubtedly the most famous Polynesian of the great age of exploration. For unlike Tupai who joined Cook's Endeavour voyage but died (at Batavia), Omai reached England where he became a celebrity, sought after by London Society and presented at court to George III. Omai's portrait was painted by the greatest painters of the age including Sir Joshua Reynolds and William Parry, and he was a house-guest of Sir Joseph Banks and Lord Sandwich. Omai is also remarkable as the first Polynesian to visit Europe and then return to Polynesia - sailing with Cook aboard the RESOLUTION on Cook's third voyage of exploration.
The club was originally part of a larger group which included Omai's wooden headrest (depicted in the Bartollozzi lithograph of Omai) and remained in the Furneaux family's possession until 1986.
The club is representative of the trade which serviced the needs of both explorers and the indigenous people they encountered during their voyages. Known as artificial curiosities, such indigenous objects formed part of the trade in fresh food, water, wood and sexual favours, and were exchanged for European goods such as iron nails, beads, axes and nails.
SignificanceThe club is significant as a Pacific artefact collected during Cook's second Pacific voyage with strong associations to Tobias Furneaux and Omai - the celebrated Polynesian who sailed to England aboard HMS ADVENTURE.
Remarkable in its provenance, this club is representative of the trade which serviced the needs of explorers and indigenous people alike during the great epoch of Pacific exploration, as well as the European vogue for artificial curiosities.
1901-1917