Thunderbird Liquid Silver Fetish Necklace

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$24.95

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SKU: AAA-Thunderb Category:

Description

This one-of-a-kind fetish necklace is made with round, barrel, and liquid silver beads interspersed with pink jasper semi-precious stones. The necklace is 24″ long, not counting the pink jasper thunderbird fetish, which is approximately 1 inch X 1 inch. There are also twelve smaller red jasper stones mixed in with the silver beads.

This unique unisex necklace can be shipped internationally.

Jasper is a mystical stone of justice, said to be highly protective and to rectify unjust circumstances. Jasper is an opaque form of Chalcedony and has been a stone for kings and shamans.

The Thunderbird is a legendary creature in North American indigenous peoples’ history and culture. It’s considered a “supernatural” bird of power and strength. It is especially important, and richly depicted, in the art, songs and oral histories of many Pacific Northwest Coast cultures, but is also found in various forms among the peoples of the American Southwest and Great Plains.

Depending on the people telling the story, the Thunderbird is either a singular entity or a species. In both cases, it is intelligent, powerful, and wrathful. All agree that one should go out of one’s way to keep from getting thunderbirds angry.

The singular Thunderbird (as the Nuu-chah-nulth thought of him) was said to reside on the top of a mountain, and was the servant of the Great Spirit. The Thunderbird only flew about to carry messages from one spirit to another. It was also told that the thunderbird controlled rainfall.

The plural thunderbirds (as the Kwakwaka’wakw and Cowichan tribes believed) could shapeshift into human form by tilting back their beaks like a mask, and by removing their feathers as if it were a feather-covered blanket.

There are stories of thunderbirds in human form marrying into human families; some families may trace their lineage to such an event. Families of thunderbirds who kept to themselves but wore human form were said to have lived along the northern tip of Vancouver Island.

The story goes that other tribes soon forgot the nature of one of these thunderbird families, and when one tribe tried to take them as slaves the thunderbirds put on their feather blankets and transformed to take vengeance upon their foolish captors.

The Sioux believed that in “old times” the Thunderbirds destroyed dangerous reptilian monsters called the Unktehila.

Additional information

Weight 0.70 oz