Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 19

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 19
Approaches to the Greenlanders Connections were of course many and close indeed with the establishment of a permanent Danish-Inuit/Eskimo (thus mixed) settlement in Greenland from 1721 onwards (cf. Egede 1741; etc.; gen- erally, e.g., Gad 1984). In other words, ethnographica from Greenland might have been more plentiful in Denmark before 1800 than, for example, the offi- cial inventories of the Royal Art Chamber/Kunstkammeret reveal. The Greenland ethnographica were perhaps even so common, or so plain, that they were not really considered "collectors’ items", in spite of the obvious love and care with which they were made from often sparse materials. It can be added that archaeological artefacts of the Inuit/Eskimo cultures in Greenland like- wise do not seem to have appeared in the Danish national collections until the nineteenth century. In an interesting, although merely anecdotic addition with respect to "ethnography" and "archaeology", it should be mentioned that Norsemen vis- iting America around 1000 are actually known to have made comparisons between lithic arrowheads observed with the natives in what is today Canada and ancient Inuit/Eskimo ones found as archaeological artefacts in Greenland. The Greenlanders thereby took a small but interesting step in direction of using analogy in Nordic and European material historical studies (Magnusson & Pálsson 1965, 27, quoting íslendingabók). But no doubt, people everywhere have noted cultural differences and made observations of an essential archaeologi- cal nature. RESEARCH & MUSEUMS The Danish National Museum in Copenhagen much benefited from the above mentioned early research activities in Greenland, as well as from the very many later archaeological and "ethno- graphical" initiatives of the nineteenth and twenties centuries: just as the muse- ums and cultural institutions in Denmark and in Greenland - including the present Greenland National Museum in Nuuk/Godtháb - still do. Today, Greenland, with a population of only 60,000+, has more than fifteen historical museums, all professionally led. This is indeed a magnificent adapta- tion of the Danish regional antiquarian and museum model. In fact, the close antiquarian and other collaboration between the two countries also demon- strate what might have been the outcome, for example, of a continuation of the West Indian/Virgin Islands-Denmark liaisons after the ceding of the islands to the United States in 1917 (this being said without any vestige of "colonial" senti- mentality). The United States Virgin Islands then saw - and still see - no major cultural-historical museum on the Danish or European model, including archaeo- logical collections, at least in part, based on concerted and intensive professional field-activities. Thus, also in this respect Greenland is a remarkable country, with a remarkable history, including its double encounter with Scandinavia, and as one of the few examples of a failure of European cul- ture and society. Moreover, if the above hypothesis of the role of the 17
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