
Descubrimientos y exhibición de momias guanches en la primera mitad del siglo xix. Museos europeos (Montpellier, Göttingen, San Petesburgo, Ginebra) y gabinetes científicos insulares de Saviñón y Megliorini
Author(s) -
Alfredo Mederos Martín,
Gabriel Escribano Cobo
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
revista de historia canaria
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2530-8270
pISSN - 0213-9472
DOI - 10.25145/j.histcan.2021.203.05
Subject(s) - cabinet (room) , art , humanities , cave , geography , archaeology , visual arts
The exhibition of two mummies in the Natural History cabinet in Paris aroused the interest of various scientific expeditions that made a stopover in Tenerife in the first half of the 19th century. Nicolas Baudin’s expedition in 1800 coincided with the discovery of a cave with mummies in El Sauzal and three ended up in the university museums of Montpellier and Göttingen and one in the cabinet of Saviñón. Another mummy was given to von Krusenstern’s Russian expedition of 1803, currently in the museum of Saint Petersburg. A new cave with mummies was discovered ca. 1815 in Tacoronte, which ended up in the scientific cabinet of Megliorini. Another mummy located in Valleseco, Santa Cruz, around 1823, was sold in Puerto de la Cruz to a Swiss merchant for the Geneva museum.