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All the United Kingdom England Birchington-on-Sea Powell-Cotton Ethnographic Collection

Powell-Cotton Ethnographic Collection

A vast archive of cultural artifacts collected from numerous expeditions across Africa and Asia.

Birchington-on-Sea, England

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Congolese Kuyu sculptures.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Entrance to the Powell-Cotton Museum.   Acabashi/cc by-sa 4.0
A view of one of the many display cases with ethnographic artifacts from Africa and expedition photographs above.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Photographs and artifacts from the Baka “pygmy” peoples: hunting arrows, okapi skin straps, and wooden fetish idol.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Ethnographic artifacts from the Bira peoples of the Ituri rainforest, Congo.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Ethnographic artifacts from Gabon, Bantu/Fang tribe.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Diane Powell-Cotton’s model recreation of an Angolan village, constructed by villagers.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Artifacts created by the Jur Beli tribe collected in the Sudan.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Fertility/rite of passage doll and portrait of a woman of the Dombondola tribe, Angola.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
A Yoruba carving depicting a cheshire cat looking leopard attacking an antelope, Nigeria.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
  Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Exploration map and photos taken during Antoniette’s ethnographic expedition to Angola   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Bronze statuettes from Benin , 19th century   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Ethnographic artifacts from Morocco and Algeria   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Weapons , uniform and saddle from Abyssinia, late 19th century (These belonged to a Greek mercenary in the service of the Abyssinian emperors army)   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Photograph of Powell Cotton and his Baka friends (with whom he and his wife spent 6 months living during their honeymoon) , Congo , 1910   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Necklaces and pipes from the Tulono tribe , Uganda   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Snake skin musical instrument , Kikuyu tribe , Kenya   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Abyssinian religious painting   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
A headhunters sword and photograph of a Dayak warrior, Borneo   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Ornate Japanese Netsuke , collected by Cotton in Tokyo and Osaka in the early 1880s   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Ethnographic artifacts from Kenya, including leopard and lion skin masks.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Photographs of the Dombondola tribe in ceremonial dress and drawings of spirit entities, Angola.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Mulimbo fertility dolls, Angola.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Specimens of medicinal plants and fungi used by the indigenous peoples of Angola.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Dayak warrior head hunting weapons and shields from Borneo (right) and Burmese weapons and arms (Left)   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Abyssinian mercenary sword   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
A Tibetan demon mask , 19th century   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Ornate 19th century apothecary vials from China   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
  Steve 55 / Atlas Obscura User
Choppers and knives   Steve 55 / Atlas Obscura User
Ethiopian/Abyssinian Coptic Christian wooden triptych.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Arrows, bow, and hunting gear of the Baka “pygmy” hunter-gatherers.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Hunting bow and poison tipped arrows of Zulu peoples.   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Ethnographic display showing jewellery and animal skin ritual masks (leopard and baboon)   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
Selection of spears from Turkana tribe, Kenya   Monsieur Mictlan / Atlas Obscura User
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The Powell-Cotton Museum is most famous for its taxidermy dioramas, but it's also home to thousands of ethnographic artifacts collected during expeditions across what were then little-explored regions of Africa and Asia.

The museum's founder, the 19th-century English explorer and conservationist Percy Powell-Cotton, distinguished himself from many of his contemporaries by recognizing and celebrating the diversity, dignity, and humanity of the native peoples of the lands he traveled. He was particularly drawn to the indigenous cultures of Africa, and spent a great deal of his life living with these communities sharing their hardships.

The respect and affection Powell-Cotton held for the people he met on these African expeditions shines through in the collections at the museum, as well as in his writings. His first published book, A Sporting Trip Through Abyssinia, chronicled the nine months he spent exploring Ethiopia and was dedicated to Empress Taytu Betul of the Solomonic dynasty that ruled the country. A later book chronicles the six months that Powell-Cotton and his wife, Hannah Brayton Slater, spent living among the indigenous Baka "pygmy" peoples of the Ituri Forest for their honeymoon.

Many of the objects in the collection from central and equatorial Africa were obtained through bartering with indigenous tribes, who at the time held animistic and shamanistic world views (though have since converted to Islam or Christianity). These artifacts are imbued with the profound significance of ancestral cosmovisions that offer a poignant window into complex cultures that once existed in greater harmony with the natural world.

Clearly, Powell-Cotton's enthusiasm for African ethnography rubbed off on his children, as two of his daughters, Antoinette and Diana, became renowned anthropologists and archeologists. The sisters conducted fieldwork in Sudan, Somalia, Nambia, Kenya, and Angola, where they researched and documented everything from the use of medicinal plants, to concepts of the anthropology of space and place, to rites of passage among men and women. Many of the artifacts they collected are on display at the museum, including a fascinating model representation of an Angolan village created by the tribe who lived there.

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The Powell-Cotton Museum is open from Tuesday to Sunday (closed on Mondays) from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The entrance fee is £8.95 but students can get a discount. The ethnographic artifacts are displayed in nearly all the galleries of the museum. Gallery 6 at the end of the museum has an impressive hands-on exhibition where visitors are able to handle many ethnographic objects from the museum's collection.

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June 17, 2019

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Powell-Cotton Ethnographic Collection
Park Ln
Birchington-on-Sea, England
United Kingdom
51.368824, 1.30994
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