President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador this week
asked for a loan of the bejeweled, brightly-colored feather
headdress so it can be shown during events to commemorate the
500th anniversary of the fall of the Aztec Empire to Spain next
year.
An assessment of the relic - said to have belonged to Aztec
emperor Moctezuma - had concluded it was too fragile to be
moved, said Sabine Haag, head of the KHM museums' association
that includes Vienna's Museum of Ethnology, which holds the
headdress.
That evaluation was carried out with Mexican representatives
between 2010 and 2012.
"Transportation, whether by land, sea or air, would massively
damage the old Mexican feather headdress," Haag said in a
statement to Reuters.
Even so, she added that the request had been forwarded to the
Austrian culture ministry for further evaluation.
Nearly a meter wide and made from more than 450 elegant,
brilliant green feathers, the headdress is said to have been
worn by Moctezuma before he was toppled by Spanish conquistador
Hernan Cortes.
The headdress is believed to have arrived in Europe in the 16th
century and later fell into the hands of Archduke Ferdinand of
Tyrol, a member of the Habsburg family that at the time ruled
Spain and Austria.
Vienna's Museum of Ethnology said it offers free entrance to all
Mexican citizens to share the cultural heritage.
(Reporting by Stefanie Eschenbacher; Editing by Dave Graham and
Rosalba O'Brien)
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