ETHAM L000103

bouteille anse étrier, réutilisation coloniale

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L000103
Bottle
Peru, North coast
Chimú. 9th – 15th century
Terracotta, metal, silver cork added in the colonial period
Gift of Pedro Abadia and Marie-Philippe Mercier to the Academy Museum in 1826
MEG Inv. ETHAM L000103

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Copie dactylographiée en 13 volumes de l'Inventaire original MEG manuscrit
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Registre L
Registre_L/Registre L_8.jpg

 

Establishing a hierarchy for mankind

In the early 19th century, societies judged rudimentary lost the virtuous image that Jean de Léry, Montaigne and Rousseau had given them. The ideology of progress labelled these Others as “primitive.” Science supported European domination of the world, contradicting the equality of all men decreed in the rush of revolutionary enthusiasm.

Eurocentrism and American archaeolog

When Mexico gained its independence in 1821, the country came into fashion. An exhibition was immediately held in London, laying the magnificent vestiges of pre-Hispanic Americas before European eyes. "American antiquities" became a separate department in the Louvre. In Geneva, a "Mexico" section was set up distinguishing pre-Columbian works from other ethnographic objects. But the association between ancient American civilisations and the declared sources of Western civilisation was short lived. In Geneva as in Paris, they were finally set aside and relegated to museums specialised in ethnography.

Jean-Michel Moreau le Jeune, “He returns to his equals,” frontispiece of: Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Discours sur l’origine et les fondements de l’inégalité parmi les hommes (1755) in the Paris edition, 1801. ©BGE, Centre d’iconographie genevoise


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