Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 8, 2026

Ikul

An ikul or ikula is a knife or a short sword of the Kuba of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Last revised
Jul 8, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
267 w
Citations
5
Source

An ikul or ikula is a knife or a short sword of the Kuba of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Ikul knife source ↗

Uses

The ikul consists of a leaf-shaped blade (iron or copper or wood) and a wooden handle finished with a round knob with sometimes decorative inlays. The blade has a well-marked central edge and can be decorated with engravings.123 They are ceremonial knives, some of which are made solely of wood (handle and blade) and richly decorated.42

The ikul are about 35 centimetres long. According to tradition, King Shyaam aMbul aNgoong would have introduced the ikul in the seventeenth century after a long period of war. The king would then have forbidden the shongo sword to replace it with the ikul, a symbol of peace.

Bibliography

Bibliography

  • Jan Elsen, De fer et de fierté, Armes blanches d’Afrique noire du Musée Barbier-Mueller, 5 Continents Editions, Milan, 2003, ISBN 88-7439-085-8
  • Laure Meyer, Art and Craft in Africa: Everyday Life, Ritual, Court Art, 1995
References

References

  1. Johanna Agthe, Karin Strauß: Waffen aus Zentral-Afrika. Dezernat für Kultur und Freizeit der Stadt Frankfurt am Main, Museum für Völkerkunde, Frankfurt, 1985. ISBN 3-88270-354-7, S. 121 (Abb. 109) p. 303
  2. Christopher Spring: African Arms and Armour. British Museum Press, London 1993, ISBN 0-7141-2508-3, p. 89 f.
  3. Monica Blackmun Visonà et al.: A History of Art in Africa. Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2003. ISBN 0131833561, p. 399 (Google-Digitalisat)
  4. Colleen E. Kriger: Pride of Men: Ironworking in 19th Century West Central Africa. Heinemann, 1999. ISBN 0852556829, p. 170 (Google-Digitalisat)