Pitt Rivers Museum
South Parks Rd
Oxford
OX1 3PP
WEBSITE▪COLLECTIONS DATABASE▪CONTACT
The Pitt Rivers Museum holds archaeological and ethnographic objects from all parts of the world. It was founded in 1884 when General Pitt Rivers, an influential figure in the development of archaeology and evolutionary anthropology, gave his collection to the University.
The founding gift contained more than 20,000 objects, but there are now around 300,000. Many were donated by early anthropologists, colonial administrators, missionaries and explorers, but the Museum has continued to collect through donations, bequests and special purchases, as well as through its staff and students in the course of their fieldwork.
Please contact the museum well in advance of your visit to ensure that access to collections is possible.
HIGHLIGHTS (Images copyright of Pitt Rivers Museum)

1893.67.4 North America, Canada/United States of America,
Blackfoot
Deer-skin shirt with quillwork decoration of circles on chest, back, shoulders and elbows, back of sleeves, neck and shoulders fringed with hair locks.
Purchased in 1893 from Edward Martin Hopkins.

1926.71.1 North America, Canada, British Columbia, Haida Gwaii, Haida. Large circular argillite plate carved with figures of halibut, sculpin, humans and frogs and inlaid with bone. Purchased in 1926 from Stevens Auction Rooms.

1966.19.1 Asia, Russia, Siberian Yupik, Chukotka
Sealskin and pigment map of the Bering Strait.
Transferred from the Ashmolean Museum in 1966.