Staff directory
Maarten Couttenier
Cultural anthropology & history
History
History
Publication details
Couttenier, M. 2017. ‘“With the risk of being called retrograde”. Racial Classifications and the Attack on the Aryan Myth by Jean-Baptiste d”Omalius d”Halloy (1783-1875)’. Centaurus 59: 1-2: 122-151. DOI: 10.1111/1600-0498.12144. (PR).
Article in a scientific Journal / Article in a Journal
Renowned for his geological studies, Jean-Baptiste d’Omalius d’Halloy also pursued a far
less known anthropological career. In different ‘editions’ of his main work, the first Belgian armchair
anthropologist tried to divide the world population into races, branches, families and peoples. As a true
figure of transition between the 18th and 19th century, he used both human and natural sciences to
establish his racial classification, based on natural characters and geography, but also evolution, history
and language. Influenced by both William Frederic Edwards and Paul Broca, d’Omalius often defended
polygenist views, despite his catholic and monogenist conviction and his refusal to accept the multiple
origin of humankind. It is also notable that d’Omalius, like Tacitus and Montesquieu before him, claimed
that the sole origin of humankind could to be situated in Northern European, which for d’Omalius still
represented the homeland of the most civilized races. Critical of the ‘Aryanmyth’, he stated that ‘Germanic’
culture and language had spread over Asia and not the other way around, an argument that caused conflict
within learned societies and at international conferences. For the first time, based on new archival material,
this article offers an overview of Belgian anthropology before the creation of Société d’Anthropologie de
Bruxelles in 1882.