Linden-Museum Stuttgart: 005390
Linden-Museum Stuttgart: 005390 License: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) |
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Linden-Museum Stuttgart: 005390 License: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) |
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Object description
This information was provided by the German museum where the object is currently located or where it was located prior to restitution.
Object Name | Fragment of a high relief (copper alloy) plaque depicting features of a man and a half moon |
Description | These relief plates come from the royal palace and served here to glorify the religious-political order in the state cult. The close connection between religion, rulership and art is also shown by the fact that the king himself poured the first crucible full of molten metal into the mold. All steps of the production of such objects were accompanied by rites and, if necessary, offerings in order to please the capricious metal god Ogun. Text: Dietmar Neitzke. |
Type | Figurenrelief |
Materials | Copper alloy |
Size, Dimensions | Width: 30.3 cm. Height: 40.7 cm. |
Dating of Object |
Museum / Collection / Acquisition
This information was provided by the German museum where the object is currently located or where it was located prior to restitution.
Museum | Linden-Museum Stuttgart |
Museum Inv.-No | 005390 |
Collector | Felix von Luschan (Berlin) purchased a large number of royal objects produced in the Benin Kingdom and sold parts of the collection to other museums. The objects reserved for Stuttgart were paid by Karl Knorr (Heilbronn, Germany). |
Acquisition date | 1899 |
Circumstances of acquisition | In October 1898, the Hamburg company "H. Bey & Co" offered the Berlin Ethnological Museum a Benin collection that came directly from Africa. However, due to a lack of funds, the entire collection could not be purchased and was therefore to be passed on to other interested parties. Felix von Luschan of the Berlin Museum therefore informed Karl Graf von Linden in November 1898, and offered him a right of first refusal. The Linden Museum then made 15,000 M available for the purchase of objects. The purchase price was paid by the Heilbronn entrepreneur Karl Knorr, which is why the collection became known as "Die Karl Knorr'sche Sammlung von Benin-Altertümern". Von Luschan published a detailed description of the collection under the same title (1901) on behalf of Count Linden and Knorr. Other buyers of the collection included the museums in Vienna and Munich, but also people such as Hans Meyer (Leipzig) and Eugen Rautenstrauch (Cologne). Text: Markus Himmelsbach. |
Notes |
Current ownership status and location
Status | restituted |
Date of last status change | 14 December 2022 |
Current ownership | Federal Republic of Nigeria |
Holding institution | National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM, Nigeria) |
Current location | Temporarily at the Linden-Museum Stuttgart |
Categorization for the search functions
This information was included by the German Contact Point for Collections from Colonial Contexts and is intended to make the object easier to find in the database.
Object Type | relief |
Materials | metal; copper alloy |
Tags |
Dataset
ID | 128 |
last Change | 2023-01-26 12:15:00 |
License | Linden-Museum Stuttgart |