Backpack (Inabnutan)
Text
Inventory number 042691
Ifugao men's rucksack, which was used on long journeys, including headhunts. Made from the hair-like fiber of a plant that acts as a rain cover. Text: Prof. Dr. Leah E. Abayao, Cordillera Studies Center, UP Baguio.
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Map Linden Museum Stuttgart
Metadata
Date
1900
Rights
Creative-Commons-Lizenz-CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Identifier
42691_1AFB72644FE6652E4173AABBE8E26246
Origin
Ifugao; Luzon; Malay Archipelago
Materials
Material / technology
Vegetable fiber
Vegetable fiber
Physical Dimensions
Width: 63cm Height: 62 cm Depth: 28cm
Provenance
Exhibit at the "Philippines Exposition" curated by Gustav Niederlein and William P. Wilson as part of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition (informally also known as the Saint Louis World Fair) which took place from April 30 to December 1, 1904 in St. Louis, Missouri. The background to this was the desire to publicly justify the American annexation of the Philippines in the Philippine-American War (1899-1902) by presenting representatives of indigenous minorities as "primitives" and "headhunters" in a presentation in the manner of a peoples' exhibition, making it necessary to do so to demonstrate American civilizing mission. Niederlein, who has already been exhibitions and publications curated on behalf of the governments of Argentina and France as a successful advocate of colonialism and the white appropriation of indigenous territories, was commissioned with William P. Wilson, director of the Philadelphia Commercial Museum, to organize the "Philippines Exposition". For this, 1,102 mostly indigenous people from the Philippines with numerous objects of their traditional material culture - a large focus was on weapons to demonstrate their "wildness" - were transported to St. Louis and exhibited there. Some died there too. Niederlein, who was primarily interested in a Wuerttemberg order, but also an activity in the German colonial service, after the end of the exhibition sent a large number of objects from the Philippines to Graf von Linden. This was combined with a request for a recommendation from the king. Text: Georg Noack.
collection
Niederlein; 0703
collection
Niederlein; 0703
Acquisition Date
1905
Display status
not displayed
Official Website
Collection
Source
Translated from German by Google Translate. Record accessed November 2021.
Cite this Page
“Backpack (Inabnutan),” Mapping Philippine Material Culture, accessed April 19, 2024, https://philippinestudies.uk/mapping/items/show/15305.
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