308g 18thC. Burmese Cockeral Opium Weight
308g 18thC. Burmese Cockeral Opium Weight
308g 18thC. Burmese Cockeral Opium Weight
308g 18thC. Burmese Cockeral Opium Weight
308g 18thC. Burmese Cockeral Opium Weight
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308g 18thC. Burmese Cockeral Opium Weight

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308g antique Burmese bronze opium weight in the form of a cockerel.

This weight would have been made in the 18th or 19th century using the lost wax technique where the model is first made from wax, a clay mold formed around the wax, the wax melted and emptied from the mold and then molten bronze poured into the mold.

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Animal folklore is prevalent in Burmese mythology and religion. Weights, loom pulleys, textiles, everyday household items, and everything in between, were commonly decorated with animal forms.

The earliest recorded Burmese weights are from the 13th century and only mimicked bird and quadruped shapes. They were used with balance scales in early commerce and most commonly ranged in weight from ½ to 100 ticals (3.5lbs). Weights and scales were often stored in boxes carved with intricate patterns.

Art collectors have referred to these weights as “opium weights.” However, art historians refer to them as graduated, or standard weights because only smaller weights were used in opium trade.