Search records
Results

Cast iron paperweight of a female hand, found in the belly of a cod

Date made: 19th century

Maker: unknown

Description: This cast iron paperweight was modelled on a female child's hand (front and reverse shown). They were poular in the Victorian era, and other examples are known. The hand was found in the stomach of a large cod, which was caught twenty miles off Ramsey in 1932.

How it came to be there is a mystery, however the cod is like a marine vacuum cleaner. The fish scours the sea bottom for edible morsels: shellfish, marine worms and fish all form part of its normal diet. Indeed there is very little they will not eat. When gutted, some have even been found to have munched their way through a plastic cup just before being caught! The large mouth enables these voracious feeders to eat quite large prey. Cod of 7lb can swallow a whiting of over 1lb whole, so it would not have been impossible for this fish to have swallowed the hand.

In essence however this object raises more questions than answers, for example how did the hand come to be in the water for the fish to find it?

Measurements: overall: 12 x 7 x 4 cm

Materials: metal: iron

Object name: paperweight

Collection: Social History Collection

ID Number: 1954-3116

Subject tags : SHIC 2.45 - Furnishings and fittings, Ornaments and curios

Comments

Optional, not displayed

Manx National Heritage (MNH) will always put you in control of the information we send you. Read our privacy policy

Linked Records

Places: