Towing bladder/hunting float.
Towing bladder / hunting float keeping a hunted whale floating. Photo: Bodil Begtrup, Danish Arctic Institute – This important hunting implement, when hunting seals from a kayak is, despite of the name, usually made from the stomach of a narwhal or, if this is not available, from waterproof seal skin. Its length is usually 35-50 cm. […]
Gut skin parka
Gut skin parka today stored at the National Museum of Denmark Source: Nationalmuseum, Danmark, File ID: ES-49677, Photo: Roberto Fortuna CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 – This girl’s parka is from Eastern Greenland and was acquired by the National Museum of Denmark in 1854. Survival in the Arctic requires extremely well-made clothing. The skill of producing watertight, lightweight clothing goes […]
The Entrail Snatcher
The Entrail Snatcher Drawing by Kârale Andreassen, today stored at the National Museum of Denmark. Nationalmuseet, Danmark, Photo: Jesper Kurt-Nielsen CC BY-SA 2.0 – The Entrail Snatcher or Lung eater, named Nalikkatteeq, was said to eat the lungs of the deceased humans, who passed by her on their way to the heavenly realm of death. With the […]
Traditional tupilak
Traditional tupilak Water colour, Aron from Kangeq, Greenland, today stored in the Ethnographic Museum in Oslo (Oslo University).Photo: Alexis Pantos/©Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo. – A tupilak was an artificially crafted object used for sorcery. It was meant to hurt the person to whom it was sent. It resembled a seal in size […]
Tupilak carving
Tupilak carving Tupilak carving, ivory, Greenland. Before 1962.Photo: Ole Woldbye, Danish Arctic Institute – A tupilak, today a tourist object and awkwardly considered to have been an auspicious talisman, was an object meant to do nothing but harm. Most Tupilaks were put together by bones from various animals, stuffed with sod and wrapped up in skin, to be […]