- Katherine Routledge
Katherine Maria Routledge, née Pease (1866-1935) was a British
archaeologist who initiated (but did not complete) the first true survey ofEaster Island .She was the second child of Kate and Gurney Pease, and was born into a wealthy Quaker family in
Darlington , northern England. She graduated from Somerville Hall (nowSomerville College, Oxford ), with Honours in Modern History in 1895, and for a while taught courses through the Extension Division and at Darlington Training College. After theSecond Boer War , she traveled toSouth Africa with a committee to investigate the resettlement of single working women from England to South Africa. In 1906 she marriedWilliam Scoresby Routledge . The couple went to live among theKikuyu people of what was thenBritish East Africa , and in 1910 jointly published a book of their research entitled "With A Prehistoric People".Easter Island
In 1910 the Routledges decided to organize their own expedition to
Easter Island /Rapa Nui . They had a state-of-the-art convert|90|ft|m|sing=on longSchooner built and named it "Mana ". They affiliated with theBritish Association for the Advancement of Science , theBritish Museum and theRoyal Geographical Society , recruited a crew and borrowed an officer from theRoyal Navy . The Mana departed Falmouth on the 25th March 1913.They arrived on Easter Island on
March 29 1914 . They established two base camps, one in the area of Mataveri and the other at the statue quarry,Rano Raraku and also exploredOrongo andAnakena . With the help of a talented islander known asJuan Tepano , Routledge proceeded to interview the natives and catalogue theMoai (giant statues) and the Ahus they had once stood on. They excavated over 30 Moai, visited the tribal elders in theirleper colony north ofHanga Roa and recorded various legends and oral histories including that ofHotu Matua , the Birdman cult, clan names and territories and also some data on the enigmatic "rongorongo " script; van Tilburg credits her with a primary role in assisting preservation of Rapa Nui's indigenousPolynesian culture.One of her discoveries was the cultural continuity between the statue carvers and the Polynesian Rapa Nui resident on the island in her time; the designs carved on the back of the statues she excavated included the same designs tattooed on the backs and posteriors of elderly islanders in the leper colony. As the tattooing tradition had been suppressed by missionaries in the 1860s this particular primary evidence was unavailable to later expeditions except through her records.
During their stay, the
German East Asia Squadron , including thearmored cruiser s "Scharnhorst" and "Gneisenau", and thelight cruiser s "Dresden", "Leipzig", "Emden" and rendezvoused offHanga Roa . While the expedition covered up their main discoveries to hide them from the Germans, the Germans converted their fleet to a fighting trim. By the time the Germans landed 48 British and French merchant seamen from sunken prizes it had become clear to all thatWorld War I had broken out, and Routledge complained sharply of this infringement of neutralChilean territory to the schoolmaster in his capacity as representative of the Government ofChile ; whilst her husband sailed the Mana toValparaiso to pass on a similar complaint to the British Consul in Santiago. There is no record of what steps the schoolmaster took to persuade the German fleet to leave Chilean waters, but they did depart, most of them to Coronel and the Falklands. Some of the stranded French merchant seamen were recruited as labourers by the expedition. Routledge also decided to mediate in the native rebellion against the sheep ranch that was led by local medicine woman and visionary,Angata .The Routledges departed the island in August, 1915 returning home via
Pitcairn andSan Francisco . She published her findings in a popular travel book, "The Mystery of Easter Island", in 1919. Hundreds of the objects that she and her husband found are now in thePitt Rivers Museum , whilst her paper records are held by theRoyal Geographical Society inLondon . Most of her scientific conclusions are accepted to this day.Health
From early childhood, Routledge had suffered from what is today believed to have been the developing stages of
paranoid schizophrenia . She had auditory hallucinations and "heard voices." In her recent biography,JoAnne van Tilburg related that Katherine's brother, Harold Pease, also suffered from mental illness, although whether he also suffered from schizophrenia is unclear. Trying to deal with her mental illness, she became involved with Spiritualism during her Oxford years and practicedautomatic writing .After 1925, her schizophrenia got worse and displayed itself in the form of
delusion alparanoia . She threw Scoresby out of herHyde Park, London mansion and locked herself inside. She also hid many of her field notes. Her family blamed Angata, accusing her of being a "witch doctor ". In 1929 Scoresby and her family had her kidnapped against her will and confined to a mental institution.She died institutionalized in 1935. Her husband gave the field notes he found to the Royal Geographical Society. One of his executors found photographs of the Easter Island expedition ten years after his death. Maps of the expedition were found in Scoresby's house in Cyprus in 1961. Family papers and photographs, previously unpublished, including details of her illness, were made public through her recent biography. Archaeology on Easter Island continues to make use of her field notes and ethnographic research.
References
*
Katherine Routledge (1919). [http://www.archive.org/details/TheMysteryOfEasterIsland "The Mystery of Easter Island: The Story of an Expedition"] , fromInternet Archive .
*Katherine Routledge: "The Mystery of Easter Island": New York: Cosmo Classics: 2005: ISBN 159605588X (Reprint)
* Jo Anne van Tilburg (2003). "Among Stone Giants: The Life of Katherine Routledge and Her Remarkable Expedition to Easter Island": New York: Scribner's. ISBN 0-7432-4480-X
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