ETHAM K002156

Arrow with a fletched shaft

Back to results
K002156
Arrow with fletched shaft
Brazil, north of Mato Grosso State
Bororo. Late 19th century
Reed, feather, plant fibre
Gift of Mrs Habisch to the Academic Museum in 1897
MEG Inv. ETHAM K002156
Geolocate the object

The image above is subject to copyright.
Copyrights for Photographic Reproduction

Registres d'inventaires historiques

Les feuillets numérisés des registres d'inventaires historiques sont soumise à un copyright.
Droits de reproduction photographique

Copie dactylographiée en 13 volumes de l'Inventaire original MEG manuscrit
Registres_inventaire_dactylographie/75.pdf

Registre K
Registre_K/rk 055.jpg

 

Amazonia

"Amazonia" designates the Amazonian world, to be more precise a body of peoples distinguished by a specific culture which anthropologists also call "lowland societies" as opposed to those of the Andine world. Some of the peoples whose objects are shown here live outside the Amazon hydrographic basin. Others do not - or no longer - live in the humid tropical Amazonian forest but in savannah or dry forest ecosystems.

The MEG collections

The MEG's Amazonian collections arrived in Geneva from the mid 18th century onwards. The oldest Amerindian objects were given to the Public Library in 1759 by the Genevan Ami Butini, a planter in Surinam, as objects of curiosity. Soldiers, naturalists and travelling diplomats were for a long time the only people to bring new objects to Genevan museums, like Oscar Dusendschön in 1960. It was only from the 1970s on that the MEG acquired the Amazonian collections gathered during real ethnographic missions in the field.


© 2021 Musée d'ethnographie, Genève