- Collection type
- Object
- Description
- Open wooden sheath [.2] with girdle of cone shell and tridacna shell rings [.3] attached to sheath. [El.B 'DCF 2004-2006 What's Upstairs?' 25/5/2005]
- Geographical reference
- Northern Luzon [Nueva Viscaya]
- Cultural groups
- Ifugao
- Date / Period
- Date made: Before 1913
- Date collected
- By 1913
- Acquisition information
- Purchased: 1913
- Materials and processes
- Material Tridacna Clam Shell, Material Shell, Material Wood Plant, Material Brass Metal, Material Plant Fibre, Process Carved, Process Perforated, Process Strung
- Dimensions
- Length: max 590 mm box
- Object numbers
- Accession number: 1913.77.40.2 Accession number: 1913.77.40.3
- Research and responses
Related Documents File - A list of publications discovered by Jeremy Coote in 1994 "In an attempt to find something out about the son of Mrs Turnbull from whom collection 1913.77 was bought I looked up the name 'Turnbull' in Shiro Saito's Philippine Ethnography: A Critically Annotated and Selected Bibliography (East - West Bibliographic Series 2), Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1972. The only Turnbull indexed is one Wilfred, whose publications, all of which are in the Philippine Magazine, are listed below. I was unable to locate any library in the UK that holds the Philippine Magazine." The list of publications are: The Dumgats of North - East Luzon: Part I and II, Vol. XXVI, no. 3 and 4, Among the Ilongots Twenty Years Ago: Parts I - III, Vol. XXVI, nos. 5, 6 and 7, Bringing a Wild Tribe Under Government Control: Parts I - III, Vols. XXVI, XXVII and XVII respectively, nos. 12, 1 and 2 respectively, Early Days in Constabulary: Parts I - XIV, Vols. XXIX and XXX. [EB 6/11/2001]
In 1913 the Pitt Rivers Museum purchased objects from one Mrs Turnbull, who also sold material to the British Museum and the Horniman in 1914. It is thought that the field collector – actually her son – was William Arthur Wilfred (“Wilfrid”) Turnbull, an American lieutenant in the Philippine Constabulary in the first decade of the twentieth century, and who spent time among the Ilongot people, notably from 1909-1910 during the William Jones Affair. He died in 1944, possibly from myocarditis while interned in a Japanese camp. Information provided by Samantha Chen as part of her SOAS Education Co-creator Internship, during which she researched the Philippine collections at the Pitt Rivers Museum and added data to the SOAS Mapping Philippine Material Culture project (https://philippinestudies.uk/mapping/collections/show/275).
Search terms: Weapon, Tool, Clothing, Ornament, Knife, Sheath, Belt, Waist Ornament
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