Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaica’s history through her artefacts

Monkey jars are earthenwar­e teapot shaped containers that were once common in every home for storing and keeping drinking water cool, but are now considered to be strictly decorative items.

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OUR QUEST to unearth the artefacts from Jamaica’s past continues. Before refrigerat­ors, simple techniques and effective were used to keep drinking water cool. The monkey jar was one such container used for this purpose and was an integral part of Jamaican household.

Monkey jars have had a long and useful history in Jamaica, the wider Caribbean, and the American South.

Monkey jars are earthenwar­e teapot-shaped containers that were once common in every home for storing and keeping drinking water cool but are now considered which strictly decorative items.

According to Olive

Senior, monkey jars incorporat­e both

African and European ceramic features and were made for hundreds of years since many examples dating from the late 17th century have been found in

Port Royal.

According to John

Michael Vlach, author of the The AfroAmeric­an Tradition in

Decorative Arts, the monkey jar may have got its name from the face jugs (jugs made with faces on them in

South Carolina), which were generally known as ‘monkey jugs’ because porous vessels that were made for holding water and cooling it by evaporatio­n were called monkey jugs.

Vllach goes on to state that the word ‘monkey’ in connection with water jugs appears in the Oxford English Dictionary as early as 1834 and that many blacks in South Carolina (who descended from slaves who were brought from Barbados) still use the word ‘monkey’ to mean a strong thirst caused by physical exertion.

These jars were so widely used throughout Jamaica that they were featured in one of Issac Mendez Belisario’s sketches ‘Water-Jar Sellers’.

In the accompanyi­ng text, Belisario states that when all of the impurities were removed from the water collected for drinking, a smaller jar such as the monkey jar was filled and arranged around the house and yard in places not exposed to the sun in order to keep the water as cool as possible.

Belisario also goes on to talk about the appearance of the jars, saying that Jamaicans were not wholly indebted to Britain and Spain for water jars because there were many potters in the city who were able to make varying types of functional water jars, which included monkey jars, which were not pleasing to the eye, but were able to keep the water much cooler when compared to their imported competitio­n because of their porous nature.

Sources: Barringer, T. Forrester, G. Martinez-Ruiz, B. (2007). Belisario, I.M. (1838). Sketches of Character, in Illustrati­on of the Habits, Occupation and Costume of the Negro Population in the Island of Jamaica. Yale Center for British Art in associatio­n with Yale University Press, New Haven London. Senior, O. (2003). Encyclopae­dia of Jamaican Heritage. Kingston, Jamaica: Twin Gunip Publishers. Vlach, J.M. (1987). The Afro-American Tradition in the Decorative Arts. (pp 86-87) University of Georgia Press, 1978. Informatio­n compiled by Sharifa Balfour, assistant curator, National Museum Jamaica

 ?? PHOTO BY RICHARD BELTO COURTESY NATIONAL MUSEUM OF JAMAICA ?? Monkey jar
PHOTO BY RICHARD BELTO COURTESY NATIONAL MUSEUM OF JAMAICA Monkey jar

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