- Collection type
- Object
- Description
- Piece of textile used to wedge a stone spear head to a carved wooden shaft.
- Long description
- Piece of textile used to wedge a stone spear head to a carved wooden shaft. The textile is light brown in colour with stitched lines of brown and light blue thread.
- Person
- Maker Te Haha
- Field collector William Scoresby Routledge
- Field collector Katherine Maria Routledge
- PRM source William Scoresby Routledge
- Date / Period
- Date made: Before 18/08/1915
- Date collected
- Between 29 March 1914 and 18 August 1915
- Acquisition information
- Donated: 1916
- Dimensions
- Width: max 35 mm, Length: max 45 mm
- Object numbers
- Accession number: 1916.36.109.6
- Research and responses
Please note that this number has been assigned to this object after lying out and cataloguing the entire collection of stone tools that the Routledge's collected from Easter Island. Many of these objects had no information that we could use to determine which accession number was assigned when these objects were accessioned as the details in the accession book are rather vague. Therefore we have matched items to records as best we could, but if other objects are located at some time in the future these records may have to been amended. [ZM & L.Ph 29/4/2004]
Please note that the Routledge's published account of their journey includes many specific object references, drawings, maps and photographs. Please refer to: Routledge, Mrs. [Katherine] Scoresby Routledge (1919) The Mystery of Easter Island: The Story of an Expedition. London: Sifton, Praed & Co. Ltd. [L.Ph 29/4/2004]
Please note that the unpublished field notes relating to this expedition are at the Royal Geographical Society. This information was found on p. 334 of the biography of Katherine Routledge (Pease): van Tilburg, Jo Anne (2003) Among Stone Giants: The Life of Katherine Routledge and her Remarkable Expedition to Easter Island. London: Scribner. [L.Ph 29/4/2004]
Katherine Routledge, in her book The Mystery of Easter Island (1920), describes Te Haha, of the Miru Clan, as one of the 3 or so craftsmen making wooden objects for sale: 'one of the old workmen [who] could still be seen sitting in his garden engaged in carving moai miro' (p. 271).See also entries in index of Routledge's 'Mystery..' for 'Te Haha'. [Dan Hicks 02/06/2012]
Search terms: Weapon, Spear-head
Further items to explore
1916.36.340.27Obsidian stone tool (mata'a ).1916.36.340.27
1969.34.246Stone projectile point, tanged.1969.34.246
1916.36.340.69Obsidian stone tool (mata'a ).1916.36.340.69
1890.40.4Metal spear head with flat elongated blade and notched foreshaft. The blade is rusty. [FB 6/7/2017]1890.40.4
1970.40.7Carved stone bird figure. Its wings are parallel to the body with the tail feathers fanned. The body tapers towards a curved rectangular base. [PR [OPS move] 6/4/2017]1970.40.7
1916.36.340.2Obsidian stone tool (mata'a ).1916.36.340.2
1916.36.340.47Obsidian stone tool (mata'a ).1916.36.340.47
1916.36.85Obsidian tanged spear-head (mata'a) from Easter Island.1916.36.85