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Home » Manchester Museum displays items it knows ‘little about’ | Manchester News
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Manchester Museum displays items it knows ‘little about’ | Manchester News

By staffDecember 18, 20253 Mins Read
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Manchester Museum displays items it knows ‘little about’ | Manchester News
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Lynette HorsburghNorth West

Manchester Museum Two carved wooden animals on show on a yellow exhibition display shelf.Manchester Museum

Curators said there was “little to nothing” known about the origins of some of the items

Thousands of African objects “given, stolen and forcefully taken” at the height of the British Empire have gone on display at a museum and curators admit they have almost no record of where they came from.

The items have been taken out of storage by Manchester Museum and placed in its Africa Hub to highlight “the gaps and silences” in its records.

In one case, all that is known about a figure of a horse with an ibis on its back is that it was donated by a Mrs M A Bellhouse in 1976, with no information about its name, place of origin or traditional use.

The museum said it hopes the “honest approach” will provoke a conversation about how the items should be displayed, or even returned.

Manchester Museum handout Carved wooden figure on show at an exhibition with a yellow background.Manchester Museum handout

Some of the items such as this carved wooden figure have been in storage for years

Curator Lucy Edematie said the Africa Hub gallery was unlike most others as it was “the beginning”, rather than the culmination of years of research.

“It is a chance to do our thinking in public, with honesty and transparency, and to involve people in that process from the start,” she said.

More than 40,000 objects from across Africa, many collected during the period of the British Empire, arrived in to the museum’s collection.

Some were taken via trade, while others through anthropology, confiscation and looting, a museum spokesman said.

Many of the objects have sat in storage for years with key details absent from their object labels.

The museum, which is part of the University of Manchester, said the items could be returned to their place of origin, or the exhibition could lead to working with diaspora communities to develop ways of sharing and celebrating cultural heritage.

Manchester Museum handout A carved wood figure of a horse with an ibis on its back on display with a yellow background.Manchester Museum handout

All that is known about a figure of a horse with an ibis on its back is it was donated by a Mrs M A Bellhouse in 1976

Other items on display include those from the Igbo people, one of the largest ethnic groups in West Africa.

It has been co-curated with Igbo Community Greater Manchester (ICM), whose vice-chairwoman Sylvia Mgbeahurike said it was important the items were brought to one place.

She said; “Some of these objects were given, some were stolen, some were taken forcefully out of conquest.

“It is important we start bringing them together again. It shows inclusiveness. It shows there is strength in diversity.

“It shows we are one people. Irrespective of our colour or where we are from. Something must hold us together.”

Manchester Museum handout A display featuring the map of Africa with the sign Africa Hub in the Manchester Museum. Manchester Museum handout

The Africa Hub also features a display co-curated with the Igbo Community Greater Manchester that tells rich stories about their cultural expression and heritage

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