'Henry Christy' (
26 July 1810 -
4 May 1865),
English ethnologist, was born at
Kingston upon Thames. He entered his father's firm of hatters, in London, and later became a director of the
London Joint-Stock Bank.
In 1850 he started on a series of journeys, which interested him in ethnological studies. Encouraged by what he saw at the
Great Exhibition of 1851, Christy devoted the rest of his life to perpetual travel and research, making extensive collections illustrating the early history of man, now in the
British Museum. He travelled in
Norway,
Sweden,
Denmark,
Mexico,
British Columbia and other countries; but in
1858 came the opportunity which brought him fame.
It was in that year that the discoveries by
Boucher de Perthes of
flint implements in
France and
England were first held to have clearly proved the great antiquity of man. Christy joined the
Geological Society, and in company with his friend
Edouard Lartet explored the caves in the valley of the
Vzre, a tributary of the
Dordogne in the south of France. Christy's funding contributed to the discovery of
Cro-Magnon man in 1868 in a cave near
Les Eyzies.To his task Christy devoted money and time ungrudgingly, and an account of the explorations appeared in ''
Comptes rendus'' (Feb. 29th, 1864) and ''
Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London'' (June 21st, 1864). He died, however, on the 4th of May 1865, of inflammation of the lungs supervening on a severe cold contracted during excavation work at La Palisse, leaving a half-finished book, entitled ''Reliquiae Aquilanicae, being contributions to the Archaeology and Paleontology of Perigord and the adjacent prorinces of Southern France''; this was issued in parts and completed at the expense of Christy's executors, first by Lartet and, after his death in 1870, by Professor
Rupert Jones.
By his will Christy bequeathed his magnificent archaeological collection to the nation. In 1884 it found a home in the British Museum. Christy took an earnest part in many philanthropic movements of his time, especially identifying himself with the efforts to relieve the sufferers from the
Irish famine of 1847.
References
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