Raincoat (Tudung)
Text
This raincoat, referred to as tudung, was worn by women in the valley of Banaue. It has the shape of a winnowing fan and is made from split rattan. The inside and outside consists of bamboo netting, holding the wild pineapple leaves (tubun di ga-ad) in place. (Sri Kuhnt-Saptodewo with Eric Anderson 2009:68).
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Metadata
Identifier
MVW31641
Origin
Northern Luzon, Banaue Bontoc; lfugao
Materials
Rattan, bamboo, wild pineapple leaves
Physical Dimensions
90 x 63 cm
Provenance
Schadenberg; before 1889 Alexander Schadenberg (1851-1896) was a chemist and ethnographer, and a natural history enthusiast. Born in Breslau, Germany, he studied chemistry and botany. After receiving his Ph.D., he worked as the assistant director of the Potassic Salt Works in Stassfurt. In 1876, he went to worked as a chemist for the drug company Pablo Sartorius in Manila and in 1879, illness forced him to move back to Breslau. From 1881 to 1883, Schadenberg and his friend Otto Koch visited southern Mindanao to carry out ethnographic and linguistic studies, basing themselves in the Bagobo village of Sibulan. There, they also made ethnographic and natural history collections. Upon their return to Germany Schadenberg spent several years working on his collections, publishing, lecturing and corresponding with museums and anthropological societies throughout Europe. Schadenberg later returned to the Philippines and became a partner of Pablo Sartorius. He settled with his family in Vigan in 1885 and continued his excursions among the native people of the islands. After Schadenberg's death in 1896, his collections passed to several museums in Dresden, Vienna, Berlin, and Leiden.
Acquisition Date
before 1889
Display status
Not on display
References
The Philippines: Museum of Ethnology, Vienna : Early Collections. Vienna: Museum für Volkerkünde, 2009. Print.
Official Website
Collection
Source
Translated from German by Google Translate Record accessed March 2021
Cite this Page
“Raincoat (Tudung),” Mapping Philippine Material Culture, accessed May 2, 2024, https://philippinestudies.uk/mapping/items/show/6065.
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