Rivet, Paul (1876 - 1958) [sv]

Andre språk: Rivet, Paul (svensk)

Personer med anknytning till Världskulturmuseerna (Statens museer för världskultur) [sv]

Beskrivelse
Paul Rivet, född 7 maj 1876, död 25 mars 1958, fransk etnolog som grundade Musée de l´Homme 1937. [sv]
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19.03.2024 20:47:49
23.03.2024 04:29:16
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URI
http://kulturnav.org/ebdc4c31-7f6b-4cf4-a2b9-58be258e0828 | RDF/XML | JSON-LD
Navn
Rivet, Paul
Svensk

Fornavn
Paul
Svensk

Mellomnavn
F
Svensk

Etternavn
Rivet
Svensk

Beskrivelse
Paul Rivet, född 7 maj 1876, död 25 mars 1958, fransk etnolog som grundade Musée de l´Homme 1937.
Svensk

Wikipedia (via Wikidata)

Fødsel
07.05.1876

-Tidspunkt
07.05.1876
Død
25.03.1958

-Tidspunkt
25.03.1958
Livsrolle
-Livsrolle
Bokmål

Svensk

Engelsk

Estisk

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Kjønn
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Nynorsk

Man
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Man
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Biografi

Paul Rivet (7 May 1876, Wasigny, Ardennes – 25 March 1958) was a French ethnologist, who founded the Musée de l'Homme in 1937. He was also one of the founders of the Comité de vigilance des intellectuels antifascistes, an antifascist organization created in the wake of the February 6, 1934 far right riots.
Rivet proposed a theory according to which South America was populated by settlers from Australia and Melanesia. Trained as a physician, he took part in the Second French Geodesic Mission for survey measurements of the length of a meridian arc to Ecuador in 1901. He remained for five years in South America where he was mentored by Ecuadorian bishop, historian and archaeologist Federico González Suárez and began an ethnographic study of the Huaorani people of the Ecuadorian Amazon, then known as the Jívaro. When he returned to France, he was active with the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, directed by René Verneau.
He published several papers on his Ecuadorian research during and immediately following the trip, culminating in an extended volume co-authored with René Verneau between 1921 and 1922 under the title Ancient Ethnography of Ecuador. In 1926, Paul Rivet participated in the establishment of the Institut d'Ethnologie in Paris, where he taught many French ethnologists. In 1928, he succeeded René Verneau as director of the National Museum of Natural History.
Rivet's theory asserts that Asia was the cradle of the American man, but also that migrations took place from Australia some 6,000 years before, and from Melanesia somewhat later. Les Origines de l'Homme Américain ("The Origins of the American Man") was published in 1943, and contains linguistic and anthropological arguments which support his thesis.
In 1942, Paul Rivet went to Colombia, where he founded the Anthropological Institute and Museum. Returning to Paris in 1945, he continued teaching while carrying on his research. His linguistic research introduced several new perspectives on the Aymara and Quechua languages. (Wikipedia 2013-12-18) {1}

Engelsk

Webreferanse
Svensk

-Linktekst
wikipedia
Svensk
Carlotta-SMVK
2277239

-Id
2277239
-System
Carlotta-SMVK
DigitaltMuseum
021038238850
-Id
021038238850
-System
DigitaltMuseum
Ingen treff.
Uuid
ebdc4c31-7f6b-4cf4-a2b9-58be258e0828
ACL (rettigheter)
434bb1b5-eb51-4f56-aec4-5f5a79835b31_SHARED
Plassholdere
Nei