On the list of bizarre world currencies, Liberia/Sierra Leon’s kissi penny is a perennial favorite. The Kissi used these strangely shaped metal pieces as currency for more than a hundred years. The kissi is a twisted length of iron that presents a “wing” shape on one end with two points on the opposite ends. Created in Mandingo villages, these artifacts were used as currency beginning in the early 1800's. Although little has been written about the derivation of the shape, a commonly held belief is that the wings are difficult to tamper with, which deters counterfeiting and renders it virtually impossible to "shave" or alter the amount of metal in them without the tampering becoming immediately obvious. Larger "denominations" were often made by twisting several pieces together and securing with leather strips. If one of them became legitimately broken, its value could only be restored in a special ceremony conducted by a shaman. Therefore, it was said to have a "soul." In earlier times, marriges among the Gbande were confirmed with a kissi penny. Once part of the bride price had been paid, the groom placed a kissi penny on his bride's head and said THIS IS MY WIFE."
These long, thick iron wires, usually between 12 and 15 inches long, were traded throughout Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. With the exception of Guinea, kissi pennies were still in use in the 1970s.
Although they were no longer accepted for tax payments beginning in 1940, kissi pennies are still used for cult ritual. Generally speaking, in mid 1800s West Africa, a cow would cost about 1,000 kissis, a slave about 5,000 kissis, and a goat about 250.
Ethnic Group:
Kissie Society
Toma Society
Bande Society Kpelle Society Loma Society
Country of Origin:
Western Guinea and Sierra Leone, Liberia
Material:
Iron
Deminsions:
12" to 18"
Reference:
The Artistry of African Currency Exhibit
Quiggin, Alison Hingston. A SURVEY OF PRIMITIVE MONEY: THE BEGINNINGS OF CURRENCY. Reprint. London: Spink & Son, 1978 plate1
Peter Westerdijk, Curator. African Metal Implements Weapons, Tools, and Regalia. Collection of Frederick & Claire Mebel, Hillwood Art Gallery, Long Island University, New York 1984. Pgs 48. p10#8a,8b
Opitz, Charles J. ODD AND CURIOUS MONEY: DESCRIPTIONS AND VALUES. Second Edition. Ocala, FL: First Impressions Printing, 1991. p59
Karl-Ferdinand Schoedler, Earth and Ore, 2500 Years of African Art in Terra-cotta and Metal. Panterra Verlag 1997. Pgs 369 and maps. p326#630
Claudia Zaslavsky, Africa Counts: Number and Pattern in Africa Culture, Prindle, Weber & Schmidt, 1973. p77 figure 74