mokomokai造句
例句与造句
- The peak years of the trade in mokomokai were from 1820 to 1831.
- The heads of enemy chiefs killed in battle were also preserved; these mokomokai, being considered marae and mocked.
- The MQB was involved in a controversy over the return of Maori tattooed heads, known as mokomokai, held in France.
- They were important in diplomatic negotiations between warring tribes, with the return and exchange of mokomokai being an essential precondition for peace.
- The mokomokai were formally returned to New Zealand on 23 January 2012 and they now housed at Te Papa and are not on display.
- It's difficult to find mokomokai in a sentence. 用mokomokai造句挺难的
- While the MQB was initially reluctant to return the mokomokai to New Zealand, a change in French law in 2010 allowed for discussions which resulted in repatriation.
- Prime said it was clear from this week's talks that Robley's three surviving granddaughters and their descendants would have to be consulted on the future of the mokomokai.
- Made of plaster and paper mache, the heads referenced mokomokai, tattooed shrunken heads made by New Zealand's indigenous Mori, but the features were those of Pkeha peoples.
- Entertainer Dalvanius Prime, who has traveled to New York for the talks, said the museum has " no obligation to even listen to anyone about the mokomokai ( tattooed heads ), let alone give them back ."
- By 1840 when the Treaty of Waitangi was signed, and New Zealand became a British colony, the export trade in mokomokai had virtually ended, along with a decline in the use of moko in Mori society, although occasional small-scale trade continued for several years.
- In the colonial period many Mori objects, including art, domestic objects and human remains ( particularly Mokomokai ) were widely collected by explorers, missionaries and scientists and were lost to the communities which had created them; largely they were lost to large European collection institutions such as the London Science Museum the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Pitt Rivers Museum at Oxford.