Hoa Hakananai'a Easter Island statue

复活节岛终极警示:文明如何自救?

A History of the World in 100 Objects

2010-07-09

14 分钟
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This week Neil MacGregor is exploring the sophisticated ways in which people connected to gods and ancestors in the Middle Ages. He is looking at religious images from India, France, Mexico and Turkey. Today - in the last programme of the second series - he is with one of the most instantly recognisable sculptures in the world: one of the giant stone heads that were made on Easter Island in the South Eastern Pacific Ocean. These deeply mysterious objects lead Neil to consider why they were made and why many were ultimately thrown down. What was the Easter Islanders understanding of their gods and their ancestors? Steve Hooper, an expert on the arts of the Pacific, and the internationally renowned sculptor Sir Anthony Caro both respond to this monumental work of devotion. Producer: Anthony Denselow
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  • Thank you for downloading this episode of A History of the World in 100 Objects from BBC Radio 4.

  • Today we're on an island far out in the Pacific Ocean.

  • It's about half the size of the Isle of Wight.

  • It's 1,200 miles from the nearest inhabited island, and it's 2,000 miles from the nearest landmass.

  • It's Rapa Nui, Easter Island, the most remote inhabited island not just in the Pacific, but in the world.

  • Not surprisingly, it took human beings a long time to get there.

  • The people of the Southern Pacific Ocean, the Polynesians,

  • were without question the greatest open-ocean voyagers in the history of the world.

  • And their ability to move in double-hulled canoes

  • over the vast expanses of the Pacific is truly one of the greatest achievements of humanity.

  • They settled both Hawaii and New Zealand, and between 700 and 900, they got to Rapa Nui,

  • and so brought to an end one immense chapter of human history.

  • For Easter Island was possibly the last place on Earth to be permanently settled.

  • It was another thousand years before European sailors matched the Polynesian feats of navigation.

  • And when they reached Rapa Nui on Easter Day 1722,

  • they were astonished to find a large population already established.

  • Even more astonishing were the objects which the inhabitants had made.

  • The great monoliths of Easter Island are like nothing else in the Pacific, or indeed anywhere else,

  • and they've become some of the most famous sculptures in the world.

  • This program is about one of them.