Rights management: Linden-Museum Stuttgart
Attribution - NonCommercial - NoDerivs 4.0 Internationalili
As widely used objects Samoan fans have been handed down in many different designs. Often represented in collections are fans with a wooden handle. In this round fan, the wickerwork has been inserted into the split handle and fixed with hibiscus bast strips. Text: Ulrich Menter
- Data Provider
- Linden-Museum Stuttgart Staatliches Museum für Völkerkunde Show original at data provider
Cataloguing data
- Object type
- Fächer
- Dimensions
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Width: 29 cm
Height: 53.5 cm - Material/Technique
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Pandanus leaf, Coconut leaf fibre, Hibiscus bast, Wood
- Current location
- Linden-Museum Stuttgart
- Inventory number
- 029896
Provenance and sources
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Assignment to a curated holding:
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Production
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when
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around 1900
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Change of physical control or legal title
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where
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Samoa
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Change of physical control
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when
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1903
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- Provenance
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The missionary Heinrich Fellmann (1871-1941) donated this fan to the museum in 1903 as part of a larger collection. Together with his wife Johanna Class, Fellmann lived in Raluana, New Britain, from 1897 to 1912. Here he maintained close contacts with the planter Richard Parkinson and his Samoan-American wife Phoebe Parkinson, as well as with her sister, the entrepreneur Emma Kolbe (1850-1914), also known as "Queen Emma". It is quite probable that the Samoan objects in the collection can be traced back to Fellmann's relationship with Queen Emma and the Parkinsons. A more precise provenance of the objects in the collection is not yet known.
Text: Ulrich Menter
Information about the record
- Legal status metadata
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 DEED
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