Product Description
SEE MORE PRE-COLUMBIAN ARTIFACTS
Made from bone, this is an ULTRA-RARE sewing needle in perfect preservation, from the mysterious Teotihuacan Pre-Columbian civilization. A needle like this would have been used to sew any number of garments including elaborate feathered warrior costumes, and to apply decorative appliques of shell, bone or stone to garments of noble classes or ritual uses. Amazingly, it has survived in perfect form with a still sharp point and unbroken pierced end. It was originally found by the late Dr. Allen Heflin who assembled a large, exceptional collection of Precolumbian artifacts while working in Mexico from 1946-1962. His original hand-written collection label is still intact on one side of the needle.
This is the first time we have ever seen or heard of such a delicate ancient artifact, most impressively made of an organic material that would have usually been lost to the elements. While we know of ancient clothing and costumes of the Pre-Columbian cultures, this is a rare opportunity to own a perfectly intact fragile needle that would have been used to craft such clothing.
The Allen Heflin Collection - Dr. Allen Heflin was a specialist veterinarian with the USDA (United States Department of Agriculture) who worked in 40 countries over 4 decades. During his years of service in Mexico from 1946-1962, he actively collected and researched a number of sites, publishing several articles in Mexican anthropological journals. His large estate consisted of over 8,000 pieces, with 70% being from Pre-Columbian cultures of Central America, 20% from North American Indian cultures, 5% of Old World and Middle Eastern antiquities, and the remaining 5% being ethnographic objects of various cultures.
HISTORY
In the first millennium A.D., the central American mega-city of Teotihuacan was THE largest city in the pre-Columbian Americas and had a broad influence on its neighboring cultures both, in simultaneous existence to it and even long after. At its peak in 450 A.D., with an estimated population exceeding 200,000 at this time, it was one of the largest cities in the world. The founders of this great city are a mystery and much debate has circled around who exactly built the city. Because the inhabitants seem to have been multi-ethnic (Nahua, Otomi, Totonac and Mayan) the culture is not attributed to a specific ethnicity or tribe but is called TEOTIHUACAN or TEOTIHUACANO.
Teotihuacan was an enormous industrial city and trading center housing a variety of trades and craftspeople. The quality of artistry in the thousands of mural paintings from Teotihuacan artists rivaled anything that was to be produced by many master painters of Renaissance Europe much later in time. Perhaps, the most famous industry the city was known for was its extensive production of obsidian objects.
Many of the same gods worshipped by other pre-Columbian cultures of the surrounding region were worshipped by the inhabitants of Teotihuacan. Gods such as the Feathered Serpent and the rain god, which were later worshipped by the Aztecs in their own culture. It is believed the Mayans and later period Aztecs, along with many other tribes, were heavily influenced by Teotihuacan and like those cultures, human sacrifice was practiced in Teotihuacan. This is evidenced by numerous human skeletons showing signs of ritual sacrifice, excavated from the sites where the pyramids were built.
The end of Teotihuacan is as much a mystery as its beginning. Most recent studies now show the city's decline began some time around the 6th century A.D. and may have been caused not by a conquering neighbor but by internal civil unrest and uprising.