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Featuring Jade, Precious & Semiprecious Stones, & Mosaic Artifacts from Mesoamerica, Costa Rica, North America, Central America and South American Cultures, Including: Maya, Aztec, Inca, Moche, Chimu, Nazca, Sinu, Tairona, Anasazi, and many more!

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The Costa Rican Jade
& Polished Stone Collection

Jadeite was the most precious of all materials in the eyes of the pre-Columbian peoples of Costa Rica, and throughout Ancient America. Jadeite and similar greenstones were worked into a wide variety of items worn as emblems of social and political power. One of the most common forms was the so-called ax god pendant, which was suspended from a cord around the neck. The name "ax god" comes from the form of the pendant, which replicates the shape of the traditional stone chopping tool (or axe). Some represent human-like supernatural beings. It is also possible that it represents a shaman who has transformed himself into a supernatural being.


Jades recovered from Peor es Nada (colorized)

Zoomorphic
Zoomorphic designs depicting unspecified or unidentifiable animalistic shapes or designs also see below in Various

Zoomorphic Pendant
Costa Rica
Zoomorphic Pendant
Costa Rica
Zoomorphic Pendants
Costa Rica
Zoomorphic Pendant
Costa Rica
Zoomorph Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Double Crocodile Bat Pendent
Costa Rica
Double Crocodile Bat Pendent - Atlantic Watershed

Private Collection

Linea Vieja area, Costa Rica
Anthropomorphic animals
Jadeite - H. 2 1/4" (5.7 cm); W. 1 3/4" (4.4 cm), and H. 2 1/2" (6.3 cm); W. 1" (2.5 cm)

Dumbarton Oaks Collection

Axes or Pendants?

There is debate over the use of the "so-called" Axe-God designs.  Some argue that they were strictly an adornment, while other suggest they were utilitarian, and specific objects do show wear.

While the jadeite used is not an extremely strong stone, it is perfectly usable as a wood cutting tool.  It is also potentially useful as a war axe against humans and animals.  In most cases, these appear to be used for more ornamental purposes than for every day utility.

Books on Prehispanic Jade in Costa Rica

Avian
Avian designs depicting an avian/bird shape or design also see below in Various

Avian Pendants
Costa Rica

INS Gold Museum Collection

 

Toucan Pendant
Costa Rica
Eagle Pendants
Costa Rica

 

Avian Pendant
Costa Rica

 

Eagle Pendant
Costa Rica

 

Eagle Pendant
Costa Rica

 

Jade Owl pendant
Jadeite
Costa Rica

CR INS Collection

Toucan / Human Head Pendant
750-900 A. D.
light green river pebble
4.2cm
Costa Rica
Toucan Pendant
100-500 AD - 2 5/8 in.
Atlantic Watershed
La Union region, Guacimo
Costa Rica
Unknown Avian Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Unknown Avian Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Unknown Avian Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Unknown Avian Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Unknown Avian Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Unknown Avian Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Unknown Avian Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Image Toucan Pendant
Guanacaste-Nicoya Culture
Costa Rica
Bird Pendant (Buzzard or Vulture?) Bird Pendant (Buzzard or Vulture)
 Atlantic Watershed region
Costa Rica
3rd century BC - AD 6th century
Costa Rica

The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection
Bird-Celt Pendant, 5th–2nd century B.C.
Costa Rica; Nicoya
Jade (jadeite); H. 5 3/8 in. (13.6 cm)
Museo Nacional de Costa Rica, San José
Bird Pendant, 1st century B.C.–1st century A.D.
Costa Rica; Guanacaste-Nicoya
Jadeite; H. 1 5/8 in. (4.1 cm)

Metropolitan Museum Collection

Ceremonial Mace (Club) Head: Bird (Male Curassow?) Ceremonial Mace (Club) Head: Bird (Male Curassow)
Southern Nicoya region
Costa Rica
4th century BC - AD 7th century

The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection
Ceremonial Mace (Club) Head: Bird Design - Green Stone

Private Collection

Parrot Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Parrot Mace Club Head - Guanecaste-Nicoya

Private Collection

 

Unknown Avian Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Double Bird Crowned Avian Pendant - Guanacaste-Nicoya Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Parrot Mace Head - Guanacaste-Nicoya Region

Private Collection

 

Double Headed Bird Offering Bowl - Guanacaste-Nicoya

Private Collection

Parrot Mace Head - Guanacaste-Nicoya Region 300 BC to 300 AD

Private Collection

 

Unknown Avian Pendant
Atlantic Watershed 
100 AD to 500 AD

Private Collection

 

Jade Celt from the Guanacaste/Nicoya Region

 

Jade Celt

Jade Museum Costa Rica

    Pale Green Jadeite - MACE HEAD circa 800 to 1500 AD

Mayan greenstone or jadeite mace head from the Guanacaste Nicoya region of Costa Rica.  Pale green, slightly translucent stone.  Avian effigy form, probably a parrot or Curassow.  Classic disk shaped eyes and grooved crest.

Introduction to the archaeology of Costa Rica

Archaeological Researches in Costa Rica

Ancient Treasures of Costa Rica: Art and Archaeology of the Rich Coast

Human / Shaman / Demon
Human, shaman, or demonic designs depicting a human/shaman/demon shape or design also see below in Various

Human Figure
Costa Rica
Human Figures
Costa Rica

 

Human Figure Axe Head
Costa Rica
Human Figures
Costa Rica

 

Bird Atop Human Head Pendant
750-900 AD
light green celt
46mm
Costa Rica
Human Figure Holding Staff
Costa Rica

 

Axe God Pendant
Guanacaste - Nicoya region
200-400 AD
Jadeite and Greenstone
Costa Rica

North Caroline museum of art collection

 
Nicoya Peninsula,Costa Rica
Axe-god pendant
Jadeite
H. 8 1/2" (21.6 cm); W. 2 5/8" (6.7 cm)

Dumbarton Oaks Collection

Figure Pendant, 4th–8th century
Costa Rica; Atlantic Watershed
Pyrophyllite; H. 4 1/8 in. (10.5 cm)

The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection

Human Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Human Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Human Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Human Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Human Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Human Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Image Human Pendant
Costa Rica

Guanacaste-Nicoya Culture

Image Human Pendant
Costa Rica

Guanacaste-Nicoya Culture

 

Celt-Shaped Pendant Celt-Shaped Pendant
Southern Nicoya region
Costa Rica
c. 4th century BC - AD 7th century
Costa Rica

The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection
Three Figure-Celt Pendants, 1st–5th century
Costa Rica; Guanacaste
Jade (jadeite); H. 3 5/8 to 4 5/8 in. (9.2 to 11.9 cm)

Museo Nacional de Costa Rica, San José
Masked Figure Pendant, 4th–8th century
Costa Rica; Atlantic Watershed
Jade (jadeite); H. 4 1/2 in. (11.4 cm)

Metropolitan Museum Collection

Cutout Jade figure pendant
Atlantic Watershed
Costa Rica
Ht. 3"
1000 - 1500 AD

Private American Collection
Jade Celt-Shaped Pendant
Costa Rica, Southern Nicoya region, c. 4th century BC - AD 7th century
c. 300 BC - AD 600

Cleveland Museum of Art

 Green stone Celt Figure Pendant - Atlantic Watershed

Private Collection

 

Pair of Celt Axe-God Figures - Guanacaste-Nicoya Region

Private Collection

 

 

 Cutout Jade Warrior Figure - Atlantic Watershed

Private Collection

 

Olmec Style Jade Pendant

Private Collection

 

Typical Style Axe-God Celt Jade Piece - Central Pacific Region

Private Collection

Polished Stone Skull Mask Pectoral Pendant

Private Collection

Axe-God Jade Celt Figure - Puntarenas

Private Collection

Axe-God Jade Celt Figure - Puntarenas

Private Collection

 

Jade Effigy Figure Pendant - Atlantic Watershed - 100 AD to 500 AD

Private Collection

 

Jade Axe-God Celt Pendant - Guanacaste Region - 100 AD to 500 AD

Private Collection

Jade Axe-God Celt Pendant - Guanacaste Region - 100 AD to 500 AD

Private Collection

 

Jade Effigy Figure Pendant - Atlantic Watershed - 100 AD to 500 AD

Private Collection

 

Polished Stone Effigy Figurine Of Maya Style/Origin - Atlantic Wathershed 500 AD to 900 AD

Private Collection

Carved & Cut Jade Effigy Figure Celt Pendant - Atlantic Watershed - 100 AD to 500 AD

Private Collection

 

Jade Axe-God Celt Pendant - Guanacaste Region - 100 AD to 500 AD

Private Collection

 

Typical Style Axe-God Celt Jade Piece - Central Pacific Region
Typical Style Axe-God Celt Jade Piece - Central Pacific Region

Gold Museum Costa Rica

Typical Style Axe-God Celt Jade Piece - Central Pacific Region

Gold Museum Costa Rica

 

Costa Rica, a tropical country of environmental and biological diversity, is located between Nicaragua to the north and Panama to the south in lower Central America. With Mesoamerica, Costa Rica is one of the two regions in which jade was extensively carved in Precolumbian times. The earliest evidence for worked jade, a pendant excavated in a burial on the Nicoya Peninsula, is dated to the mid-first millennium B.C., and jade continued to be carved into similar personal ornaments until approximately 700 A.D., when its use appears to have died out and/or been replaced by a fashion for ornaments of gold. The early pendant was made in the shape of a celt, or ax, with a top worked into a bird head and torso. Circular eyes and a wide downturned beak define the head above folded wings, in a basic version of what would be the classic Costa Rican bird pendant in jade. The bird-celt pendant would undergo many elaborations during subsequent centuries, all the while retaining these essential features.

Primates
Primate designs depicting monkeys or other primate shapes or design also see below in Various

Monkey Pendant
Costa Rica

 

Monkey Pendant
Costa Rica

 

Monkey Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Monkey Mace Head

Private Collection

Monkey Head Jade Knife - Guanacaste

Private Collection

 

Monkey Headed Axe-God Celt - Guanacaste 100 AD to 500 AD

Private Collection

Mace Head In The Shape Of A Monkey's Head - Guanacaste

Private Collection

 

   
Marine
Marine designs depicting fish or other marine animal shapes or designs also see below in Various
Dual Shark Head and Bat Pendent
Costa Rica

 

   
Feline
Feline/cat designs depicting Jaguars or other cat shapes or designs also see below in Various
Jaguar Mace Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Quartz Jaguar Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection
 

Jaguar Mace Club Head - Ganacaste-Nicoya

Private Collection

 

Double Headed Jaguar Pendant - Guanacaste

Private Collection

 

Polished Stone Ceremonial Mace (Club) Head: Feline (Jaguar?) Costa Rica, Southern Nicoya region, 4th century BC - AD 7th century Overall: 8.8cm x 7.7cm x 10.6cm

Cleveland Museum Of Art

Anphibians
Amphibian designs depicting frogs, toads, or salamander shapes or designs also see below in Various
Toad Pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Four Frog Pendant - Atlantic Watershed - appears to have been varnished - est. 100 - 500 CE (AD)

Private Collection

Frog Pendant, 4th–8th century
Costa Rica; Atlantic Watershed
Jade (jadeite); H. 2 in. (5.1 cm)

The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection

Reptiles
Reptile designs depicting snakes, lizards, crocodiles, or other reptile shapes or designs also see below in Various
Crocodile Stone Pendant    
Crocodile Figures
Costa Rica
Bird-tailed Crocodile

Private Collection

Crocodile Soapstone Pendant
Unusual Stylized Reptile Head Mace Head - Atlantic Watershed

Private Collection

Crocodile God Hollow/Tube Pendant - With Extended Tongue - Puntarenas

Private Collection

Double Crocodile Bat Pendent - Atlantic Watershed

Private Collection

Necklaces
Necklace Adornments indefinable or odd shapes or designs - consisting entirely of jade or combining jade and other materials such as gold

Jade and gold bird motif necklace
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade and gold tube / bead necklace
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade and gold tube / bead necklace
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade and gold tube / bead necklace
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade necklace
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade and gold tube / bead necklace with gold bell
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade necklace
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade necklace
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade necklace
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade necklace with gold bell
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade and gold tube / bead necklace
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade and gold tube / bead necklace with gold bells
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Jade necklace - Atlantic Watershed

Jade Museum Costa Rica

Jade necklace - Atlantic Watershed

Gold Museum Costa Rica

Jade necklace - Atlantic Watershed

Jade Museum Costa Rica

 

   
Adornments
Adornments indefinable or odd shapes or designs also see below in Various
Pendant or possibly a wooden pole ornament
Costa Rica

 

Unknown Purpose
Costa Rica

 

Carved Piece
Costa Rica

 

Misc. Carved Pieces Costa Rica

Private Collection object - unknown provenience

Carved Jadeite Pendant from Peor es Nada Costa Rica Carved Pieces - Pendants
 
from Peor es Nada Costa Rica
Pendant, 4th–7th century
Costa Rica; Atlantic Watershed
Jade (jadeite); H. 2 1/4 in. (5.7 cm)

Metropolitan Museum

Utility Objects
Utilitarian Objects Made From Jade or Stone from Costa Rica

Jade Celt    

The Jade Museum
San Jose, Costa Rica

The Precolumbian peoples of Costa Rica didn't build tall pyramids or huge monuments. Instead, they left a legacy of carefully wrought ceramics, jade, stone, and gold. Visitors to Costa Rica's capital city of San Jose can see this rich heritage at two fascinating museums.

The Marco Fidel Tristan Castro Jade Museum occupies a floor in the National Insurance Institute's headquarters. The 1,600 artifacts include an astonishing collection of ceramics from 500 B.C. to A.D. 1300, incorporating human figures, serpents, birds, alligators, and fish. Hundreds of jade pieces produced from 500 B.C. to A.D. 800 are another highlight. Jade is harder than steel, and these objects, sawn with sisal fibers and deerskin strips and polished with beeswax and abrasives, have an air of stately grandeur, although most are just a few inches long.

The Jade Museum's eleventh-story windows afford fine views of the city and surrounding mountains. By contrast, the Costa Rica Central Bank's Gold Museum is two stories underground, inside an enormous vault. Visitors to the collection are briefed on local history, archaeology, and metallurgy before reaching the gold itself.

Honoring the region's indigenous and ancient peoples as much as the gold, the exhibition groups some two thousand pieces by their importance to shamans and warriors. There are dozens of hammered gold breastplates, nose ornaments, and necklaces, and hundreds of small but spectacular casts of costumed figures, deities, and animals--the spiritual and natural world of the rain forest in miniature.

From Archaeology Magazine

Various
Various designs depicting a variety of animal or other shapes and designs in jade

Axe blade deity and animalistic figures, and bat pendent
Costa Rica

Carnegie Museum of Natural History collection

Axe blade deity and animalistic figures
Costa Rica

Private Collection

(1-3,5,6) Axe blade deity and animalistic figures, (7) clothing or harness adornment, (8) pendent
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

(1) pendent, (2-3) Axe blade deity and animalistic figures, (4) cloth or hair pin
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

(1-3,5-7) Axe blade deity and animalistic figures, (4) pendant
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

 

Axe blade deity and animalistic figures
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Axe blade deity and animalistic figures
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

Axe blade deity and animalistic figures
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

 

(1) Hair or cloth pin, (2,4-6) Axe blade deity and animalistic figures, and (3) rare jade buttons
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

(1-4,8) Axe blade deity and animalistic figures, (5-7) pendants
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

 

(1) Axe blade avian figure, (2) ear plugs, (3-4) pendants
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

deity and animalistic figure pendants
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

 

Axe blade deity and animalistic figures
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

(2,5,6) Axe blade deity and animalistic figures, (1,3-4,7-8) pendants
Costa Rica

Private Collection

 

 

Knives & Daggers
Jade or other polished green stone hand held cutting tools or weapons
Monkey Head Jade Knife - Guanacaste

Private Collection

 

   

MACE Club Heads
Various battle mace or club-head designs usually affixed to the end of a wooden handle

Jaguar Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Parrot Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Unidentifiable Animal (possibly Tapir) Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Human Head Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Human Head Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Shaman Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Ceremonial Mace (Club) Head: Bird (Male Curassow?) Ceremonial Mace (Club) Head: Bird (Male Curassow)
Southern Nicoya region
Costa Rica
4th century BC - AD 7th century

The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection
Quartz Jaguar Club Head
Costa Rica

Private Collection

Ceremonial Mace (Club) Head: Bird Design - Green Stone

Private Collection

Monkey Mace Head

Private Collection

 
Mace Head In The Shape Of A Monkey's Head - Guanacaste

Private Collection

Parrot Mace Club Head - Guanecaste-Nicoya

Private Collection

 

Unusual Stylized Reptile Head Mace Head - Atlantic Watershed

Private Collection

 

Parrot Mace Head - Guanacaste-Nicoya Region

Private Collection

 

Jaguar Mace Club Head - Ganacaste-Nicoya

Private Collection

Parrot Mace Head - Guanacaste-Nicoya Region 300 BC to 300 AD

Private Collection

Pale Green Jadeite - MACE HEAD circa 800 to 1500 AD

Mayan greenstone or jadeite mace head from the Guanacaste Nicoya region of Costa Rica.  Pale green, slightly translucent stone.  Avian effigy form, probably a parrot or Curassow.  Classic disk shaped eyes and grooved crest.

Avian Mace Head

Jade Museum Costa Rica

Polished Stone Ceremonial Mace (Club) Head: Feline (Jaguar?) Costa Rica, Southern Nicoya region, 4th century BC - AD 7th century Overall: 8.8cm x 7.7cm x 10.6cm

Cleveland Museum Of Art

     
       

Utility
Jade and other stone utility pieces

Working Celt, 1st century B.C.–5th century A.D.
Costa Rica; Nicoya
Jade (jadeite); H. 3 5/8 in. (99.3 cm)

Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh (2793/72)

Discovered at the site of Las Huacas on the Nicoya Peninsula in 1903, this working celt of jadeite shows both polished and unpolished surfaces. The unpolished end was hafted.

Jaguar Head - Phallic Shaped - Ceremonial Spoon - Atlantic Watershed

Private Collection

Double Headed Bird Offering Bowl - Guanacaste-Nicoya

Private Collection

Other Stones
Other designs in other Central American Stones

Figure-and-Birds Pendant Figure-and-Birds Pendant
Costa Rica, Atlantic Watershed region
4th-8th Century

The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection