Alphonse Pinart

Alphonse Pinart
Born 1852
Bouquinghem, Marquise, Pas-de-Calais
Died February 13, 1911
Boulogne-sur-Mer
Nationality French
Spouse Zelia Nuttall

Alphonse Pinart (1852–1911) was a French explorer, philologist, and ethnographer. He was an early champion of the theory that the Americas were first populated by migration across the Bering Strait. To support his research, he made extensive travel in the Pacific, from Alaska and the Aleutian Islands[1][2] to Easter Island. He also pilfered numerous historical documents from the Spanish archives in Santa Fe, New Mexico:[3]

Large numbers of documents of this period [from 1743 to 1749] were . . . stolen and are now in the so-called “Pinart” collection. Pinart (Alphonse) was a Frenchman and visited New Mexico and Arizona in the early ‘seventies [1870's], at which time this “collection” was made.

He recorded vocabularies of the Mission Indians in California, and also documented early rock art in Aruba. In 1875, he purchased a crystal skull and other ethnographic artifacts from Eugène Boban, which was later donated to the Trocadéro Museum.[4]

Publications

References

  1. ^ "Alutiiq Masks Return After 136 years". http://www.kmxt.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=44&Itemid=2. Retrieved 2008-06-06. 
  2. ^ Steffian, Amy; Haakanson, Sven (2009). "Coming Home, If Only for a Visit". National Museum of the American Indian (Spring): 34–40. 
  3. ^ Ralph Emerson Twitchell, “The Spanish Archives of New Mexico”, Vol. 2, pp. 213-214 (1914).
  4. ^ "Museum admits real-life Indiana Jones handed over a dud 'relic' 130 years ago". Archived from the original on 2008-05-13. http://web.archive.org/web/20080513170233/http://www.nationalpost.com/todays_paper/story.html?id=456303. Retrieved 2008-05-26. 
  5. ^ Pinart, Alphonse (in French) (on-line book text) VOYAGE A L'ILE DE PAQUES (OCÉAN PACIFIQUE) http://www.rongorongo.org/pinart/225.html. Retrieved 2008-12-16 

External links