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17.12.12: Aztec feathered headdress

  • Page ID
    188778
    • Dr. Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank and Dr. Beth Harris, "Aztec feathered headdress," in Smarthistory, August 10, 2015, accessed December 24, 2022, https://smarthistory.org/feathered-headdress-aztec/.
    • Smarthistory

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    by and

    Video \(\PageIndex{1}\): Feathered headdress, Aztec, reproduction (National Anthropology Museum, Mexico City). Original: early 16th century, quetzal, cotinga, roseate spoonbill, piaya feathers, wood, fibers, amate paper, cotton, gold, and gilded brass, Aztec, Mexico, (World Museum, Vienna)

    Backstory

    This headdress is also called the Penacho of Moctezuma II. Moctezuma II’s headdress was first mentioned in a European inventory in 1596, when it was acquired by Austrian Archduke Ferdinand II von Tyrol. It was listed there as “a Moorish hat.” It was likely an object sent from Mesoamerica to Europe by Hernan Cortes, but it is unknown whether it actually belonged to Moctezuma II himself.

    In the late nineteenth century, Austria established its first Museum of Natural HIstory, with geologist Ferdinand von Hochstetter as its director. While searching for objects to display in the new museum, von Hochstetter found the headdress in Ambras Castle, Archduke Ferdinand’s former residence in Innsbruck, Austria. Since then, the headdress has been displayed in the ethnology museum in Vienna (now called the Weltmuseum Wien). In 2010, the Weltmuseum embarked on a restoration and research project on the headdress in conjunction with INAH (Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History).

    Over the last century and a half, the headdress has become an important touchstone for Mexican national and indigenous identity, and many Mexicans think it should be returned. Representatives and activists from Mexico have continuously made requests for its repatriation, but despite a deal almost struck in 2011, the Austrian authorities have as yet refused to officially allow the loan or return of the headdress to Mexico, claiming that the trip across the Atlantic would be too risky for the fragile object. As art historian Khadija von Zinnenburg Carroll writes,

    The replica of the headdress in Mexico City, which is featured in the video above, was created and installed in 1940.

    Backstory by Dr. Naraelle Hohensee

    SmartHistory images for teaching and learning:

    Feathered headdress,  Aztec (reproduction)
    Feathered headdress,  Aztec (reproduction)
    Feathered headdress,  Aztec (reproduction)
    Click on image for larger picture (External link to flickr)
    Feathered headdress,  Aztec (reproduction)
    Feathered headdress,  Aztec (reproduction)
    Click on image for larger picture (External link to flickr)