Brazil receives old clothing from Denmark

One of the most preserved among the eleven remaining mantles of the Tupinambá native people will definitely return to Brazil. By the end of 2023, the treasure made with red feathers of the scarlet ibis will leave the ethnographic collection of the Nationalmuseet, the National Museum of Denmark, and will join the collection of the National Museum in Rio de Janeiro.

Just over one meter long and 60 centimeters wide, the tupinambá mantle made in the 17th century with feathers from the ibis, a red bird that inhabits the Brazilian coast, will be returned to Brazil.

It will be received and kept by the Museu Nacional do Rio ( National Museum of Rio).

The piece was donated by the Nationalmuseet, in Copenhagen (Denmark), where it had been since 1689.

Despite the Tupinambá mantle being a donation resulting from negotiation between museums, its history is inserted in a context of the return of historical relics to their countries of origin – heating up the debate on the return of archaeological and art pieces removed from their territory during periods of colonization.

The return will fuel the debate about restitution.

Two years ago, the last garment made had 3,500 feathers and took four months to be woven.

The new mantles have awakened a knowledge that was dormant due to the distance between the Tupinambás and the sacred garments of their ancestors, all of them currently in Europe.