Dangerous intruder or beneficial influence? The role of the Institut de Paléontologie Humaine in the development of prehistoric archaeology in Spain (1900-1936)
Résumé
In this paper I examine the role of international scholars in the making of prehistoric research in Spain. I focus on the
activities of the Institut de Paléontologie Humaine (IPH), created in Paris in 1910. In the years immediately preceding
the First World War, two IPH professors, the French Henri Breuil and the German Hugo Obermaier, did extensive
research in the prehistoric archaeological sites and the decorated caves of the Iberian Peninsula. Specialists from all
over Europe and the USA travelled to Spain to collaborate with them, and the results of the their work were presented
internationally. Nevertheless, the professional exchange with their Spanish counterparts soon became fraught with scientific
disputes and personal quarrels, when some Spanish scholars accused them of seizing the relics of Spain’s national
past, describing them as agents of scientific colonialism. Taking this case as reference, I set out to overcome the (false)
dichotomy between nationalism and internationalism in the writing of history of archaeology and I seek to explore the
influence of the nationalist paradigm on the historiography of prehistoric archaeology in Spain.
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