Yahoo – AFP,
16 December 2017
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| It is very rare for a historical artifact to be returned by the Vatican museums, which boast one of the largest collections of art and archaeology in the world |
The Vatican
museum has returned a shrunken head to Ecuador, relinquishing the wizened
cranium of an Amazon warrior nearly 100 years after it was taken by a missionary.
The grisly
body part -- which belonged to the Shuar indigenous people -- was handed over
during Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno's visit to Pope Francis on Saturday
after months of negotiations, the Vatican said.
It is very
rare for a historical artifact to be returned by the Vatican museums, which
boast one of the largest collections of art and archaeology in the world.
The
fist-sized capitulum, which never went on show, is believed to have been a war
trophy for the Shuar, who mummified and kept the heads of their warrior
enemies, as well as their heroes.
The Shuar
are still one of the most important ethnic groups in the Amazon region. In
recent years they have hit the headlines for attempting to resist
government-authorised large-scale mining on land they claim as their own.
They used
to be best known in the West for their shrunken heads -- called
"tsantsa".
Removing
the skull, boiling the flesh then sowing up the eyes, nose and mouth is
believed to have trapped avenging souls inside, or stored the wisdom of their
elders.
The head,
brought to the Vatican by a missionary in 1925, will be given to the Pumapungo
ethnographic museum in Cuenca.

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