Tiger bells in the West
The West
During a trip to New York, USA, Dutch anthropologist
Hendrik Wittenberg and his wife Babs visited a curio
shop in China Town. They came across a basket full of tiger bells.
He describes them as follows:
The bells are made of bronze, very light and poorly cast.
The colour of the bronze is very light. The bells are 'guilded'
with gold paint. When I asked the Chinese lady at the pay desk
about the meaning of the characters, she said 'Something like:
provide the people with what they need, likefood, water, sort
of
well
actually I dont know
. When
I asked her what name she used for the bells when she made back
orders the lady said Well, Sir, if I would know the answers
to all your questions, I wouldnt be sitting here in this
shop, wouldnt I?. Do you want to buy them? So I
bought two bells, $ 2,- each...
 
These are new tiger bells, similar to a bell from another report,
said to be from the Qing dynastie.
The fact that the shop had such a large quantity of these bells
could indicate that they were not only for sale to tourists but
also to the local Chinese community.
Christine de Jong,
Amsterdam, bought three small tiger bells in 2002, in a Chinese
store in Amsterdam. The bells are of the A
type but because of the whiskers the design looks more like
a cat's head than a tiger (as with the bells from Syria).
No further details were available.
The design looks more like a cat's
head than a tiger
The bell is 2 cm. wide and 1,6 cm. high.
As with the bells from New York this
shop in Amsterdam had many of these bells in stock, probably to
be sold not only to tourists but also to the local Chinese community.
 
All text and photographs are copyrighted,
for information please contact F. de Jager
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