Repatriations of human remains from Germany – 1911 to 2019

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v18i1.3232

Keywords:

repatriation, human remains, provenance research, colonial collections

Abstract

While occasional earlier restitutions of colonially acquired human remains, mostly skulls, from German anthropological collections to source communities went largely unnoticed, it seems that such repatriations have 'taken off' since the hand-over of 20 skulls to a Namibian delegation in 2011. It is, however, difficult to get a comprehensive overview of these events, given the German federal system and the diversity of institutions involved. Moreover, there is no standard as to how much provenance research should be conducted before returning human remains and how much detail should be published, if at all. This article reviews repatriations of human remains from German institutions and related publications. It argues for authors and institutions to publish and publicize these events and related research more widely. It also looks at the variability of the political context of these processes and argues for more direct, i.e. government-independent contacts between collecting institutions and source communities.

Author Biography

Andreas Winkelmann, Institute of Anatomy Medical School Brandenburg

Director of the Institute of Anatomy

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Published

03/23/2020

How to Cite

Winkelmann, A. (2020). Repatriations of human remains from Germany – 1911 to 2019. Museum & Society, 18(1), 40–51. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v18i1.3232