Bague de tiki maori - image 1
Bague de tiki maori - image 2
Bague de tiki maori - image 3

Maori Tiki Ring

Regular price
€29,90
Sale price
€29,90
Unit price
per 
Size (circumference) in mm

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This Maori tiki ring has a spooky style. However, the meaning of this Polynesian Maori lucky charm is rather positive

  • Primitive Polynesian lucky charm
  • Perfect for giving yourself a terrifying style
  • More than just a pattern, the tiki has powerful creative abilities that it sometimes shares with us
  • Material: stainless steel
  • Different sizes available
  • Refund ALWAYS possible (see our returns policy)
  • FREE STANDARD DELIVERY

What is the origin of Maori tiki?

Most often, when we hear the word “Tiki,” we think of carved wooden statues with piercing eyes and a menacing look.

And yet, Maori tiki is always synonymous with joy and balance (especially spiritual)!

In short, this Maori tiki ring actually represents a very ancient Polynesian lucky charm.

Basically, “Tiki” is the name the first man had. A bit like Adam for the Christian religion, the primordial god and creator of Polynesian Maori mythology fathered the Maori tiki.

According to legend, Tiki lived a peaceful but terribly lonely life. One day, he saw his reflection in a pond. Overjoyed at having found a fellow man, he jumped into the puddle to kiss his reflection.

Imagine the happiness you would feel if, living alone for an eternity, you saw the image of a being similar to you appear...

In short, without much surprise, the image shattered. Taken by rage, he undertook to destroy this pond by filling it with earth. According to Maori Polynesian mythology, the first woman was born from the mud that was thus formed.

We can find many other myths, sometimes very disturbing, about Maori tiki throughout the Pacific region.

The ancient worshipers of this divinity worshiped him through prayer, song... and even, on certain islands, through human sacrifice.

No worries ! Nobody does that anymore these days.

However, there is no doubt that this Maori tiki ring carries within it the creative power that Polynesian culture readily attributes to it.