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Gourd Marimba Or Indian Xylophone

Natural History Museum

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    Object Details

    Donor Name

    Henry Hague

    Notes

    FROM CARD: "FORMING PART OF A BAND USED IN FESTIVALS ILLUS.: P.76, PL.63, CELEBRATIONS CATALOGUE, SMITHSONIAN PRESS, 1982. 15248 LOANED TO RENWICK 7/14/81. RETURNED 1983. MARIMBA (MARIMBA DE TECOMATE), MID-19TH CENTURY. TACTIC INDIANS; GUATEMALA. WOOD, GOURDS, TWINE, NATIVE FIBER, BEESWAX. 20 X 70 X 16 (50.8 X 177.8 X 40.6) NMNH 15248, GIFT OF HENRY HAGUE. AFRICAN SLAVES BROUGHT THE IDEA OF THE GOURD MARIMBA WITH THEM TO THE NEW WORLD. GUATEMALAN INDIANS NOW ASSOCIATE THE INSTRUMENT WITH THEIR OWN ETHNIC HERITAGE, ESPECIALLY IN THE PERFORMANCE OF TWO DANCES, THE DANCE OF THE DEAD AND THE DANCE OF INVITATION. IN THESE, MASKED DANCERS RE-CREATE ANCIENT TALES OF THE TRIBAL PAST. THE MARIMBA IS ALSO USED AT FESTIVE DANCES CALLED ZARABANDAS, HELD BY RELIGIOUS OFFICIALS OF THE COMMUNITY."

    Record Last Modified

    30 Jul 2020

    Specimen Count

    1

    Culture

    Tactic Indians

    Accession Date

    31 Oct 1875

    Accession Number

    003407

    USNM Number

    E15248-0

    Object Type

    Marimba

    Unknown - Object

    50.8 cm
    177.8 cm
    40.6 cm

    Place

    Guatemala, Central America

    See more items in

    Anthropology

    Data Source

    NMNH - Anthropology Dept.

    Topic

    Ethnology

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/35a793ae8-a62a-4d9b-abea-54ebd4ea036f

    Record ID

    nmnhanthropology_8341943

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