Ethnographic Museum Artis

Coordinates: 52°21′57″N 4°55′07″E / 52.365725°N 4.918519°E / 52.365725; 4.918519
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Ethnographisch Museum Artis was housed in the Volharding building at Artis.

Ethnographic Museum Artis (

Artis
zoo.

History

The Amsterdam zoo and ethnographic museum were founded in 1838 by the Royal Zoological Society 'Natura Artis Magistra' (NAM).[1] The Society focused on science in general and on presentation of the Dutch colonial territories in particular. Therefore, not only live exotic animals collected, but also many other zoological material (skeletons and preparations), minerals and ethnographic objects. These collections were housed since 1851 in a Natural History Museum, also called the "Great Museum". It soon grew out of the building and the collections of ethnographic objects were separated from the rest and housed in the nearby building of the 'Society Amicitiae', the 'Little Museum". Eventually, the growing ethnographic collection could no longer be housed at the Society Amicitiae building, and in 1888, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the zoo, the ethnographic museum was established in the Volharding ("perseverance") building.[2]

The zoo's ethnographic collection stemmed from the desire to understand creation. The Ethnographisch Museum Artis was the third ethnological museum in the Netherlands. Although it was smaller than the

Tropenmuseum
. It took over the collection in 1926. Of the original over 11,000 objects from the Artis collection, a large number decayed, but what remained still represents one of the core collections of the Tropenmuseum. A significant number are permanently exhibited.

People

A major donor was the linguist Herman Neubronner van der Tuuk. From 1887 to 1902, the collection was managed by curator Cornelis Marinus Pleyte, who wrote a guide.[5] Though it was published by the Society Natura Artis Magistra, Pleyte and his father, the Egyptologist Willem Pleyte, went on to serve on the board of Brill Publishers.[6]

References

  1. ^ Dieserud, Juul (1908). The scope and content of the science of anthropology: historical review, library classification and select, annotated bibliography; with a list of the chief publications of leading anthropological societies and museums (Public domain ed.). The Open Court Publishing Co. pp. 193. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
  2. ^ "Contents". International Zoo News Vol. 49/6 (No. 319) September 2002. Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  3. . Retrieved 26 October 2012.
  4. . Retrieved 26 October 2012.
  5. . Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  6. ^ "A Brill Calendar: March 28". Brill. Archived from the original on 7 June 2013. Retrieved 27 October 2012.
Bibliography
  • Dartel, Daan van, "The Oldest Collections of the Tropenmuseum: Haarlem and Artis", in: David van Duuren et al., Oceania at the Tropenmuseum, Amsterdam 2011, pp. 30-45.
  • Mehos, Donna C., Science and Culture for Members only; The Amsterdam Zoo Artis in the Nineteenth Century. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2006.
  • Pleyte, C.M., Verzameling van ethnographische voorwerpen aan de Westkust van Afrika, voornamelijk in het Congo-gebied, verzameld, en voor het meerendeel aan het Genootschap ten geschenke gegeven. Amsterdam, 1885 (Flemish)
  • Pleyte, C.M., "Gids voor den bezoeker van het Ethnographisch Museum van het Koninklijk Zoölogisch Genootschap": Natura Artis Magistra. Amsterdam, 1888.

52°21′57″N 4°55′07″E / 52.365725°N 4.918519°E / 52.365725; 4.918519