A Rare Ancestor Skull with Polychrome Decoration
Epoque 19th century or earlier
Medium Human Skull
Dimension 15 x 13 x 18 cm (5⁷/₈ x 5¹/₈ x 7¹/₈ inches)
Human Skull, pigment
Central Island Andaman Islands
19th Century or earlier
Size: 15cm high, 13cm wide, 18cm deep - 5¾ ins high, 5 ins wide, 7 ins deep
Epoque: 19th century or earlier
Medium: Human Skull
Dimension: 15 x 13 x 18 cm (5⁷/₈ x 5¹/₈ x 7¹/₈ inches)
Provenance: Acquired by a British Officer from a funerary cave in 1881
Acquired by Carl von Borg, Cologne, in 1927 (no. A210)
Ex Finch and Co, circa 2012
Ex Martin Doustar, Paris, France
Ex Private collection
Literature: published: Golgotha, The Cult of Skulls, M Doustar, Cassochrome, 2014, pg. 180, item no. 36
The Andaman Islands are an archipelago of around two hundred islands which are in the eastern Bay of Bengal. Anthropologists believe these islands have been inhabited for several thousand years at least, with the very earliest settlers dating back to the Palaeolithic era. According to the ‘Out of Africa’ hypothesis, the Andamanese people are thought to be the first groups of modern humans (Homo Sapiens) who migrated out of the African continent, 100,000 to 50,000 BC.
As with other indigenous people from ancient tribal societies, the Andamanese practiced the ‘cult of the ancestor’. The skulls were often painted with lines, dots, or stripes and worn as adornment around the neck, as a sign of mourning and future protection against disease and pain.
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