Shrunken Maori heads head home
23.05.12
Maori warriors tattoed their faces with elaborate designs that reflected their rank.
The heads of those killed in battle were severed and preserved, but venerated until the soul was deemed to have departed.
Fascinated by the tattoos, European seafarers bought the heads from the Maoris, who often swapped the trophies for weapons with which to fight rival tribes.
The grotesque commerce widened, and even after Britain outlawed it in 1831, the practice persisted. At its peak, Maoris would sometimes attack enemies in order to take slaves, kill them and then tattoo the severed heads for trading.
New Zealand began a campaign in the 1980s to recover the heads so that the remains could be interred with respect.
More than 200 heads, known as mokomokai, have been handed back by 14 countries, but around 500 are still in European museums, according to Te Papa.
France's cultural chiefs were sympathetic to the appeal but worried that this might set a worrying precedent for other artefacts such as Egyptian mummies and the bones of early Christian martyrs.
Source: The Daily Telegraph