Muhammad Khaznadar (1840–1929) was an early archaeologist in Ottoman Tunisia. He was the eldest son of Mustapha Khaznadar, a prominent Prime Minister of Tunisia who served from 1855 until 1873.[1]
Khaznadar was the first Tunisian to propose the founding of a museum, located in the Bardo Palace in the town of Manouba just outside Tunis.[2] His collection was to form the kernel of the Bardo National Museum. Khaznadar's work also influenced the development of cultural policies in Tunisia in the years leading up to the establishment of the French protectorate in 1881.[3]
As a native North African at the forefront of archaeology during the time of European colonialism, he has been compared to the Ottoman Osman Hamdi Bey and the Egyptian Rifa'a at-Tahtawi.[4]
Biography
editKhaznadar was born into a wealthy family tied to the Tunisian ruling elite. His father, Mustapha Khaznadar, originally from the Greek island of Chios, had risen to become a leading figure in the Tunisian court. Muhammad received an education in Paris, where he was exposed to European culture, history, and archaeology.[5] In Paris, he was a student of Ernest Desjardins.[6]
After returning to Tunisia in 1865, Khaznadar became involved in the exploration and collection of antiquities. He was the first Tunisian to conduct modern archaeological excavations at Carthage, starting in 1866. His efforts led to the formation of a significant collection of antiquities, including Roman and Punic inscriptions, mosaics, and sculptures.[7] Khaznadar established connections with European scholars and institutions. He communicated his discoveries to the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in Paris. However, his growing collection also led to tensions with foreign archaeologists and the French colonial authorities.[8] Parts of his collection were exhibited at the Exposition Universelle (1867) in Paris and the 1873 Vienna World's Fair.[6]
One of Muhammad Khaznadar's key achievements was his role in the founding of what would later become the Bardo National Museum. In 1866, he proposed the creation of a museum to house Tunisia's antiquities, to be located at the Manouba Palace, the residence of the Tunisian bey.[9] The collection that Khaznadar amassed, including the Khaznadar inscriptions, a notable Bacchus statue, and other significant artifacts, formed the core of the museum's early holdings.[10] German traveller Heinrich von Maltzan described the excitement that had developed around the museum in the late 1860s, describing that it: "in its specialty, Phoenician and Carthaginian antiquities, surpassed every other museum in the world":[11]
von Maltzen noted that the museum contained more than 120 Punic inscriptions (2/3 Punic and 1/3 neo-Punic) found during Khaznadar's excavations in three different points around the ruins of Carthage. He complained about the limited public access to the museum, such that it had “acquired the mysterious reputation of containing the greatest rarities of pagan and Christian literature”.[12] Khaznadar's refusal to allow scholars to copy the inscriptions was attributed to a concern that "the value of his museum could be damaged by premature publication of his inscriptions".[13] Taher Ghalia, Chief Curator of the Bardo, wrote that the foundation of the modern national museum by decree, on 25 March 1885, followed from the 1876–1877 “patrimonialization” policy of Hayreddin Pasha, who had succeeded Mustapha Khaznadar as Prime Minister. Hayreddin Pasha regulated archaeological work and ordered “the seizure of Mhammed Khaznadar’s private collection which was acquired fraudulently”.[14]
Gallery of his collection
edit-
Statue of Bacchus, today in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
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The Carthaginian mother goddess inscription, known as KAI 83
References
edit- ^ Moumni 2020, p. 266.
- ^ Moumni 2020, p. 272: "He became the first Tunisian to propose the founding of a museum. At that point, no “public” museum existed in the regency of Tunisia, except for François Bourgade’s collection of antiquities in the enclosure of the Chapel of Saint-Louis in Carthage. Muhammad’s project thus represents a crucial moment in the history of collecting in Tunisia. Notably, the location intended for this museum was not Muhammad’s own house in Carthage, but rather the Bardo Palace, his father’s main residence located in the neighboring town of La Manouba."
- ^ Moumni 2020, pp. 278–280.
- ^ Moumni 2020, p. 282.
- ^ Moumni 2020, pp. 267–269.
- ^ a b Laporte 2002, p. 227-228.
- ^ Moumni 2020, p. 270.
- ^ Moumni 2020, pp. 271–272.
- ^ Moumni 2020, p. 273.
- ^ Moumni 2020, p. 274.
- ^ von Maltzan 1869a, pp. 98–99.
- ^ von Maltzan 1869a, p. 99: “Aber, aus was für einem Grunde auch immer es gesammelt wurde, das Museum war einmal vorhanden. Die Thatsache konnte nicht in Abrede gestellt werden, obgleich ich keinen Menschen zu finden vermochte, der es gesehen hätte. Das Gesehenwerden, was doch sonst der einzige Zweck bei einem Museum zu sein pflegt, schien nämlich bei diesem durchaus nicht beabsichtigt und in Anschlag gebracht. Es war vielmehr so schwer zugänglich, wie die vermauerte Bibliothek des Patriarchen von Alexandrien in Aegypten. Wie die Bücher jener Bibliothek dadurch, daß sie nie ein Mensch zu Gesicht bekommt, in den mysteriösen Ruf gekommen sind, die größten Seltenheiten der heidnischen und christlichen Literatur zu enthalten, so sollte auch das unzugängliche Museum des Ministerjungen von Tunis dadurch, daß Niemand seine geheimnißvollen Schäze in Augenschein nahm, den Ruhm erlangen, das erste der Welt zu sein; und damit ja dieser Zweck erfüllt werde, so wurde von Zeit zu Zeit irgend ein verunglückter Franzose, welcher in Tunis am Hungertuch nagte, dafür bezahlt, um einen Artikel über diese Sammlung in eine Pariser Zeitung zu sehen, einen Artikel voll Schwulst und Lobpreisungen, der alle Leser desto mehr auf den Inhalt des Museums gespannt machen mußte, als er eigentlich über dasselbe durchaus keinen Aufschluß gab. Das Museum war also beinahe zur Fabel geworden, wie der Schat des Kyffhäusers, an welchen jeder Bauer glaubt, den aber keiner gesehen hat.”
- ^ von Maltzan 1869b, pp. 98–99: "...es könne dem Werth seines Museums durch frühzeitige Veröffentlichung seiner Inschriften Abbruch geschehen"
- ^ "The curator's word". Bardo museum. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
Bibliography
edit- Laporte, Jean-Pierre (2002). "Les Pricot de Sainte-Marie, père et fils, et l'archéologie de la Tunisie et de Carthage". In Briand-Ponsart, Claude; Crogiez, Sylvie (eds.). L'Afrique du nord antique et médievale: Mémoire, identité et imaginaire (in French). Publications de l'Université de Rouen. pp. 207–273. ISBN 9782877759274. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
- Moumni, Ridha (2020). "Archaeology and Cultural Policy in Ottoman Tunisia Part I: Muhammad Khaznadar (1865–70)". Muqarnas. 37. Brill: 265–289. doi:10.1163/22118993-00371P10. ISSN 0732-2992. JSTOR 27141540. Retrieved 18 August 2024.
- von Maltzan, Heinrich (1869a). Sittenbilder aus Tunis und Algerien (in German). Dyk.
- von Maltzan, Heinrich (1869b). "§ 4. Inschrift zu Manuba". Reise auf der Insel Sardinien (in German). Dyk'sche Buchhandlung. pp. 583–586.
Further reading
edit- Moumni, Ridha (6 December 2021). "Archaeology and Cultural Policy in Ottoman Tunisia Part II: Muhammad Khaznadar (1871–99)". Muqarnas. 38 (1). Brill: 223–252. doi:10.1163/22118993-00381p08. ISSN 0732-2992.