The museum's collections comprise more than 200,000 ethnographic objects, 100,000 photographs and 146,000 printed works from all over the world. Important collections include Mexican artifacts, such as a unique
Aztec feathered headdress, part of
James Cook's collection of
Polynesian and
Northwest Coast art (purchased in 1806), numerous
Benin Bronzes, the collection of
Charles von Hügel from India, Southeast Asia, and China, collections from the
Austrian Brazil Expedition, artifacts collected during the circumnavigation of the globe by the
SMS Novara, and two of the remaining
rongorongo tablets. The museum's most famous piece is a
feathered headdress which tradition holds belonged to
Moctezuma II, the Aztec
emperor at the time of the
Spanish Conquest. This has created friction between the Mexican and the Austrian governments. Originally taken as war booty by the Spanish in the 16th century, Austria acquired it from France in 1880.
Departments • Sub-Saharan Africa • North Africa, Middle East, Central Asia and Siberia • East Asia: China, Korea, Japan • Insular Southeast Asia • South Asia, Southeast Asia, Himalayas • Oceania and Australia • North and Central America • South America • Photo Collection == History ==