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Fishing net weight

Part of the collection: Traditional fishing

Popularization note

Weights have been used since the Middle Ages and even earlier to ballast fishing nets. They were called gręzy in the vernacular of some regions. In combination with floats, weights allowed the net to take the right shape in the water and maintain the right depth, which was important for effective fishing. Weights were made with a range of materials, such as stones, and fire-baked clay, while later they were also made of iron, lead concrete, or cement. Other items used to ballast the nets were sandbags. The weights were usually crafted by the fishermen themselves. The featured specimen from the first half of the 20th century is made of stone surrounded by a forged iron clamp with an oval link serving to fasten it to the net. This type of weight is the most common object in the collection of the Pomeranian Ethnography Department of the National Museum in Szczecin. Another type of weight represented in Szczecin's ethnographic collections is a rectangular plate made of iron or clay. Agnieszka Slowinska

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

nieznany

Object type

fishing net weight

Technique

forging

Material

stone, iron

Origin / acquisition method

donation

Creation time / dating

1901 — 1945

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Dziadowo

Owner

Muzeum Narodowe w Szczecinie

Identification number

MNS/E/5779

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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