Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

James Cook Collection: Australian Museum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See also:Australian Museum andJames Cook

James Cook Collection
H000104- Feather Cape
H000104- Feather Cape
Held byThe Australian Museum
LocationSydney, New South Wales Australia
Provenance
OriginGreater Pacific
SourceCaptain James Cook
Collectedc.1768- c.1780
WebsiteOfficial website

TheAustralian Museum'sCook Collection was acquired in 1894 when it was transferred from theGovernment of New South Wales. At that time it consisted of 115 artifacts collected onCaptain James Cook's three voyages of discovery Throughout thePacific Ocean, during the period 1768–1780, along with documents and memorabilia related to these voyages. Many of theethnographic artifacts were collected at a time of first contact between Pacific Peoples andEuropeans. In 1935 most of the documents and memorabilia were transferred to the Mitchell Library in theState Library of New South Wales. The provenance of the collection shows that the objects remained in the hands of Captain James Cook's widow,Elizabeth Cook and her descendants until 1886. In this year John Mackrell, the great nephew ofIsaac Smith, Elizabeth Cook's cousin, organized the display of this collection at the request of the NSW Government at theColonial and Indian Exhibition inLondon. In 1887 the London-basedAgent-General for the New South Wales Government, Saul Samuel, bought John Mackrell's items and also acquired those items belonging to the other relatives Reverend Canon Frederick Bennett, Mrs Thomas Langton, H.M.C. Alexander and William Adams. The collection remained with the Colonial Secretary of NSW until 1894, when it was transferred to the Australian Museum.[1]

James Cook

[edit]
Main article:James Cook
Statue of Captain James Cook at Admiralty Arch, London

Captain James Cook,FRS,RN (7 November 1728[NB 1] – 14 February 1779) was a British explorer, navigator and cartographer who ultimately rose to the rank of captain in the Royal Navy. Cook made detailed maps ofNewfoundland prior to making three voyages to the Pacific Ocean, during which he achieved the first European contact with the eastern coastline of Australia and theHawaiian Islands, as well as the first recordedcircumnavigation ofNew Zealand.

Cook joined the Britishmerchant navy as a teenager and joined the Royal Navy in 1755. He saw action in theSeven Years' War, and subsequently surveyed and mapped much of the entrance to theSaint Lawrence River during the siege ofQuebec. This helped bring Cook to the attention of theAdmiralty andRoyal Society. This notice came at a crucial moment in both Cook's career and the direction of British overseas exploration, and led to his commission in 1768 as commander ofHM BarkEndeavour for the first of three Pacific voyages.

In three voyages Cook sailed thousands of miles across largely uncharted areas of the globe. He mapped lands from New Zealand to Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean in greater detail and on a scale not previously achieved. As he progressed on his voyages of discovery he surveyed and named features, and recorded islands and coastlines on European maps for the first time. He displayed a combination ofseamanship, superior surveying and cartographic skills, physical courage and an ability to lead men in adverse conditions.

Cook was killed in Hawaii in a fight withHawaiians during his third exploratory voyage in the Pacific in 1779. He left a legacy of scientific and geographical knowledge which was to influence his successors well into the 20th century and numerous memorials worldwide have been dedicated to him. However, his role in opening areas of the Pacific tocolonisation and its subsequent effects on indigenous peoples have been the subject of both political and scholarly debate.

Provenance

[edit]

Hawaii

[edit]

Captain Cook first visited theHawaiian Islands on 18 January 1778 on his third voyage, and his ships spent three months there, mostly anchored offKauai andHawaii. Cook considered them his most important discovery for England, and named the group the Sandwich Islands after his patronLord Sandwich,First Lord of the Admiralty.

The objects acquired reflect the fact that the Hawaiians initially treated Cook as a god and presented him with high status goods such as feathered capes, hats, ornaments and images. As this was a point of first contact between Europeans and Hawaiians, a thriving trade developed, and a large number of artefacts, mostly those that were carried or worn, were brought back to England. Hawaiian collections from Cook's voyages show in particular the extent and variation of Hawaiian featherwork at the time.

Cook's ships returned to Hawaii nearly a year later after exploring the northwest coast ofAmerica,Alaska and Northeast Asia. They spent a few weeks without incident and departed only to return due to a problem with the ship. On 14 February 1779, Cook was killed on Hawaii due to an unfortunate misunderstanding.

The artifacts in the Australian Museum's Cook collection attributed to Hawaii include a feathered cloak, four feathered circlet ornaments, a foundation mat for a feather cloak, a woven cane helmet, a nose whistle, a shark's tooth ring, three miniature bone carved turtles, a shark's tooth knife and more than 20 cut pieces of barkcloth.[2]

  • H000104- Feather cloak (ʻahuʻula)
    H000104- Feather cloak (ʻahuʻula)
  • H000087- Lei
    H000087-Lei
  • H000111- Shark's tooth knife
    H000111- Shark's tooth knife
  • H000114- Netting for feather cloak
    H000114- Netting for feather cloak
  • H000141- Wicker helmet (mahiole)
    H000141- Wicker helmet (mahiole)
  • H000150- Shark's tooth ring
    H000150- Shark's tooth ring
  • H000151-001- Carved turtle figures
    H000151-001- Carved turtle figures

American north west coast

[edit]

Cook's ships left Hawaii on 2 February 1778 and set course for North America, which they sighted on 7 March. On 29 March they discoveredNootka Sound. The area had been claimed by the Spanish underJuan José Pérez Hernández, 1774 and the English bySir Francis Drake, 1579. Cook named the areaKing George Sound. The Resolution and Discovery spent about one month in the area while the ships were repaired and made ready for the expedition to find the northwest passage.

A great deal of trading was done and the largest number of objects collected from the NorthWest Coast is from Nootka Sound. Objects from other groups may have been collected in Nootka. Wooden Combs were characteristic and several were collected (see H000110).

The next stop wasPrince William Sound andCook Inlet. The ethnographic specimens collected are very mixed and includeTlingit people andAthabaskan. Cook noted that none of the people lived in the bay where they had anchored. Containers of various kinds were made of mountain sheep horn. They appear to be Athabaskan in style (see H000056).

InUnalaska or theAleutian Islands Samwell recorded that the crew traded cloth from Hawaii and Tahiti with the locals for arrows and other articles. Only a few objects can be traced to the voyages of Cook. Small ivory birds, possibly gaming pieces, were probably collected in Unalaska (see H000151). A large number of weapons and fishing and hunting implements, as well as a few paddles and canoe models, were collected in the northern parts of America and Asia and are hard to provenance (see H000106 and H00122 and H000139).[3]

  • H000056-Scoop
    H000056-Scoop
  • H000110- Comb
    H000110- Comb
  • H000122- Fish hook
    H000122- Fish hook
  • H000139- Bone harpoon
    H000139- Bone harpoon
  • H000106- Harpoon
    H000106- Harpoon
  • H000151- Harpoon head
    H000151- Harpoon head

New Caledonia

[edit]

Cook visitedNew Caledonia for two weeks during his second voyage in 1774. Eight days were spent in the Balad area, where Cook participated in a ritual exchange of gifts. Not many artefacts were collected, and most of these were weapons, which the local people were happy to sell to the visitors. New Caledonian hardwood clubs were finely carved and highly polished. (H000147, H000148) Hodges depicts a spearthrower being worn as an ornament to a hat. The Australian Museum's collection includes 3 spearthrowers (one ornamented: H000119). 3 knitted bags for slingstones were collected and the Australian Museum holds one of these (H000115). The Australian Museum's collection also includes 2 combs (H000108, H000109).[4]

  • H000108- Comb of quills
    H000108- Comb of quills
  • H000109- Comb of quills
    H000109- Comb of quills
  • H000115-Knitted Bark String Bag
    H000115-Knitted Bark String Bag
  • H000119-Carved Ornament
    H000119-Carved Ornament
  • H000147- Wooden club
    H000147- Wooden club
  • H000148- Wooden club
    H000148- Wooden club

New Zealand

[edit]

The only known European contact withNew Zealand prior to Cook's voyages was a short and hostile interaction whenAbel Tasman visitedGolden Bay on the north west tip of the South Island in 1642. On 8 October 1769HMS Endeavour, after 2 months at sea, anchored in a bay on the eastern side of the North Island. This was a case of first contact, and Cook and his crew did not succeed in peaceful interactions with the local Māori group, so the ship left the area with Cook naming it Poverty Bay. However theEndeavour went on to circumnavigate both the North and South Islands and there was contact with many differentMāori groups and exchanges of goods were made.

New Zealand was visited byFrench ships in 1769 and 1772, and Cook's ships returned on both the 2nd (1773) and third (1777) voyages. Kaeppler suggests that the availability of iron tools and the influence of European ideas and desires for certain goods may have stimulated changes in artefact production over the period of interactions.

As this AM collection came via Cook's widow and is therefore probably personal to Cook himself, it cannot be identified to a specific voyage, area or date. Kaeppler documents the types of artefacts collected from New Zealand during Cook's voyages. Over 40 cloaks were collected (H000103), a large number of body ornaments (H000222, H000156, H000063), feather boxes and musical instruments. Many weapons of nearly every type were collected, but this Cook collection has only one of these, a stone patu (H000085). There are 3 stone adze blades (H000082,83,84) and two fish hooks (H000137, H000138). Kaeppler notes that food preparation equipment was seldom collected, perhaps because exchanges happened away from the villages, and between men.[5]

  • H000063- Ear ornament or Kuru
    H000063- Ear ornament or Kuru
  • H000082- Adze blade
    H000082- Adze blade
  • H000085- Stone club or patu onewa
    H000085- Stone club or patu onewa
  • H000103- Cloak of dyed flax
    H000103- Cloak of dyed flax
  • H000137- Fish hook
    H000137- Fish hook
  • H000138- Fish hook
    H000138- Fish hook
  • H000156- Ear ornament or tangiwai
    H000156- Ear ornament or tangiwai
  • H000222- Neck ornament
    H000222- Neck ornament

Society Islands

[edit]

The island ofTahiti, the largest of the 14Society Islands, was where Cook had his first contact withPacific Islanders.Samuel Wallis had visited Tahiti onHMS Dolphin (1751) in June–July 1767. A brisk trade developed, and large quantities of iron nails and spikes were exchanged for barkcloth, fish hooks, pearls, shells, adzes and other tools. The FrenchmanLouis-Antoine de Bougainville also visited in 1768, and the artefacts and stories brought back to Europe from these 2 voyages helped to create the vision of Tahiti as a south pacific paradise.

The Royal Society chose Tahiti as a suitable place to observe theastronomical event of theTransit of Venus, and for this purpose Cook was sent on his first voyage. On 13 April 1769, after eight months at sea, theEndeavour arrived at Tahiti'sMatavai Bay, the same inlet that the Dolphin had visited 2 years before (4 men from the Dolphin had joined Cook's crew). The islanders welcomed Cook and Banks with green banana branches, calling them TAIO or friend, and giving them gifts of perfumed cloth. Soon afterwards a procession of canoes entered the bay and 'Queen'Purea presented Cook with a pig and fresh food, which was reciprocated by Cook with beads and trinkets.

The nearby promontory which Cook namedPoint Venus was used to observe the Transit of the planet Venus across the face of the Sun on 3 June 1769. Although this phenomenon was observed at 26 different points around the world, astronomers later realised that the telescopes of the day weren't precise enough to accomplish the task of accurately determining the distance between the Earth and the Sun.

Cook and Banks later circumnavigated the island of Tahiti and then visited theBora Bora group, guided by a Tahitian priestTupaia, who with his servant travelled on theEndeavour to Batavia, where he became ill and died.

TheEndeavour spent 3 months altogether in the Society Islands, and Cook's ships were to return 3 more times during later voyages (Aug–Sep 1773, April–May 1774, and Aug–Sep 1777). During these visits there was a constant exchange of goods and gifts. Iron nails and axes were valued, and provisions, fish hooks,adzes and barkcloth were exchanged for these. A large number of objects were therefore collected, and many detailed drawings and maps of the islands were produced.

The items collected cannot be identified to a particular island or voyage, and before Cook arrived there had been a flourishing exchange of artefacts and ideas between the islands. Banks enjoyed the opportunities to witness and sometimes participate in Tahitian life. He took part in aheiva public dance ceremony, accompanied by drums and nose flute (see H000143). He was also allowed to take part in a mourning ceremony and was fascinated by the costume worn by the chief mourner. According to Forster none of these were collected until the 2nd voyage, when parts of at least 10 were taken to England. Tha Australian Museum's collection has an example of the shell breast ornament component (see H000149). Semicircular breast ornaments, or gorgets, were commonly worn, and many were collected by the crew and valued as a special type of artificial curiosity (see H000105 and H000145). Barkcloth was presented in large pieces on several occasions to the visitors. Much of the cloth collected was cut into pieces and placed in books of barkcloth samples.[6]

  • H000101- Bark cloth
    H000101- Bark cloth
  • H000105- Breast Ornament
    H000105- Breast Ornament
  • H000130- Fish hook
    H000130- Fish hook
  • H000133- Fish hook
    H000133- Fish hook
  • H000135- Fish hook
    H000135- Fish hook
  • H000136- Fish hook
    H000136- Fish hook
  • H000140- Fish hook
    H000140- Fish hook
  • H000143- Nose flute
    H000143- Nose flute
  • H000145- Breast ornament
    H000145- Breast ornament
  • H000149- Chest ornament
    H000149- Chest ornament
  • H000153- Wooden net needle
    H000153- Wooden net needle
  • H000212- Bark cloth
    H000212- Bark cloth
  • H000218- Bark cloth
    H000218- Bark cloth

Tonga

[edit]

TheTongan islands were visited by Le Maire in 1616, and Abel Tasman in 1643, but there are no identified Tongan artefacts collected from these voyages. The northern islands were sighted by the Englishman Samuel Wallis in 1767, and Cook's ships visited the islands for a few days in 1773 and then again briefly in June 1774. He named them the Friendly Islands and returned on his third voyage in April–July 1777. It was known that Wallis had traded iron nails for a club in 1767, and the iron tools traded during Cook's second voyage stimulated different carving techniques which are evident in wooden artefacts collected on the third voyage.

Many specimens were collected from Tonga and many are specific to a particular voyage. Some items collected were ofFijian andSamoan origin, and this fact documents the pre-existing trade the Tongans had with their neighbours. Many body ornaments were collected, such as H000151- a small ivory human figure, probably strung on cord and worn as a neck ornament, and 3 shell necklaces H000116, H000117, H000152. Several kinds ofpandanus mats were collected (H000098), as were many baskets of different styles and materials (H000102, a KATO MOSI KAKA beaded basket). Fly whisks, food preparation equipment, bowls, neck rests, noseflutes, panpipes, and various tools were collected, but the Australian Museum collection does not include examples of these. Some fishing equipment is present – a fish net H000144, and 11 fish hooks H000121- H000134. Combs collected were made from the midribs of coconut leaflets, intertwined with fine sennit cord to make decorative patterns.[7]

  • H000098- Woven mat
    H000098- Woven mat
  • H000102- Basket
    H000102- Basket
  • H000116- Neck ornament
    H000116- Neck ornament
  • H000117- Neck ornament
    H000117- Neck ornament
  • H000121- Fish hook
    H000121- Fish hook
  • H000128- Fish hook
    H000128- Fish hook
  • H000144- Fishing net
    H000144- Fishing net
  • H000151- Carved Figure
    H000151- Carved Figure
  • H000152- Neck ornament
    H000152- Neck ornament
  • H000351- Comb
    H000351- Comb

Vanuatu

[edit]

Quiros had named the islands ofVanuatu Australia Del Espiritu Santo, and Bougainville had visited in 1768. Cook made three landings on his second voyage on the islands ofMalakula,Erromango, andTanna, and renamed the group theNew Hebrides. There was open warfare, except for Tanna, so it is likely that all the non-weapons in Cook collections came from Tanna.Panpipes (H000112) in the AM collection have been attributed to Tanna. The arrows H000158-H000170 have also been attributed to Vanuatu. There are three clubs in the Banks collection that may possibly have been collected on Cook's second voyage – H000292-H000295, H000366 – can be compared to those in the Forster collection in Göttingen.[8]

  • H000112- Pan Pipes
    H000112- Pan Pipes
  • H000292- Club
    H000292- Club
  • H000158-164- Arrow heads
    H000158-164- Arrow heads
  • H000293- Club
    H000293- Club
  • H000295- Club
    H000295- Club
  • H000366- Club
    H000366- Club

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Old style date: 27 October

References

[edit]
  1. ^Thomsett, Sue."Cook Collection, History of Acquisition".Electronic Museum Narrative. Australian Museum.
  2. ^Thomsett, Sue."Cook Collection- Hawaii".Electronic Museum. Australian Museum. Archived fromthe original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved23 May 2012.
  3. ^Thomsett, Sue."Cook Collection- North West Coast America".Electronic Museum. Australian Museum. Archived fromthe original on 27 April 2013. Retrieved23 May 2012.
  4. ^Thomsett, Sue."Cook Collection- New Calidonia".Electronic Museum. Australian Museum. Archived fromthe original on 27 April 2013. Retrieved23 May 2012.
  5. ^Thomsett, Sue."Cook Collection- New Zealand".Electronic Museum. Australian Museum. Archived fromthe original on 27 April 2013. Retrieved23 May 2012.
  6. ^Thomsett, Sue."Cook Collection- Society Island".Electronic Museum. Australian Museum. Archived fromthe original on 27 April 2013. Retrieved23 May 2012.
  7. ^Thomsett, Sue."Cook Collection- Tonga".Electronic Museum. Australian Museum. Archived fromthe original on 27 April 2013. Retrieved23 May 2012.
  8. ^Thomsett, Sue."Cook Collection- Vanuatu".Electronic Museum. Australian Museum. Archived fromthe original on 27 April 2013. Retrieved23 May 2012.
  • Adrienne L. Kaeppler "Artificial Curiosities". Being an Exposition of Native Manufactures Collected on the Three Pacific Voyages of Captain James Cook, R. N. Honolulu,Bishop Museum, 1978.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=James_Cook_Collection:_Australian_Museum&oldid=1305636644"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp