The supi is a war club of the Solomon Islands.

Uses
Cut from iron wood, its diamond shaped head is specific to the Solomon Islands.1 About thirty centimetres long, it has a carved striking head with well-marked ribs. It is native to Malaita island.2 Besides its common name of supi, it can sometimes be referred to as a supe or subi.3 Some were carved from whale bones.4 The handle was sheathed with coconut fibre braiding, sometimes engraved or inlaid with shells. Some, carved with a crocodile face at their end, were reserved for the tribes chiefs.5

References
References
- Ethnologia Cranmorensis - Volumes 1 à 4, 1937, p.61
- Deborah Waite, Kevin Conru, Art of the Solomon Islands, 2008, p.118
- Deborah Waite, Artefacts of the Solomon Islands in the Julius L. Brenchley Collection, 1987, p.39
- Charles Elliot Fox, Grafton Elliot Smith, The Threshold of the Pacific: An Account of the Social Organization, Magic and Religion of the People of San Cristoval in the Solomon Islands, A.A. Knopf, 1924, p.188
- L’éclat des ombres. L’art en noir et blanc des îles Salomon [1]
Bibliography
Bibliography
- Anthony JP Meyer, Oceanic Art, Könemann, 1995.