Three skulls from Sabah in the Pitt Rivers Museum

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2022

Abstract

The collection of the Pitt Rivers Museum at Oxford University includes three human skulls from British North Borneo, now Sabah, taken and preserved as part of a headhunting tradition. Labelled as heads of Tangalung natives, they were accessioned by the Museum in 1889. Establishing the provenance of the skulls is fairly simple but determining their context is not. North Borneo became a British protectorate in 1888, with administrative authority in the hands of the North Borneo Chartered Company, but the company struggled to control remote parts of the territory where there was little British presence. It employed Dayaks from Sarawak as policemen to deal with the ethnically diverse population and put a stop to blood feuds and headhunting, but Dayaks had their own headhunting tradition and the heads in the museum were taken and processed as trophies by policemen. Presented to a colonial official, they became trophies of a different sort, ultimately displayed in a British museum. © 2022 Royal Asiatic Society. All

Keywords

British North Borneo, Dayak, Governor Creagh, Pitt Rivers Museum, Sabah, Tangalung natives

Divisions

arts,History

Publication Title

Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society

Volume

95

Issue

1

Publisher

Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society

Additional Information

Cited by: 1

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS