Cabangu Museum Explained
The Cabangu Museum (Portuguese: Museu de Cabangu) is a museum in the town of Santos Dumont, Brazil. It is dedicated to the memory of Santos Dumont, the "Father of Aviation".[1]
In the house, personal objects, photos and the aviation museum are still preserved. In the Museum are also deposited the ashes of the first woman pilot of the Brazilian aviation, Anésia Pinheiro Machado.
Cabangu
There are three versions for the meaning of the word "Cabangu":[2]
- The first, somewhat folkloric, comes from the transformation of the phrase "The angu is over" (in Portuguese: Acabou o angu), used by the old residents at the time of the construction of the railroad in the region, that with the passage of time became Cabangu.
- The second, would be a place where, at the time of the Inconfidência Mineira, a caboclo lived with the surname "Cabangu".
- The third, whose etymology would originate in the Tupi-Guarani, name of the beginning of the Mantiqueira region: "Caa (woods) / bangu (dark).
Financial problems
The Museum has been suffering from lack of cash, labor debts and inability to maintain and restore content. The institution even tried to make crowdfunding, but has been closed a few times for lack of funds.[3] [4]
See also
References
- Web site: Restauração do Museu Cabangu, em Santos Dumont, deve custar R$ 12 milhões . MGTV . 2017-09-18 . Restoration of the Cabangu Museum, in Santos Dumont, should cost R$ 12 million. 2018-09-11. pt.
- Web site: O PAI DA AVIAÇÃO. pt. THE FATHER OF AVIATION. Museu de Cabangu. December 28, 2017.
- Web site: A memória de Santos Dumont pede socorro. 2 February 2019 . The memory of Santos Dumont asks for help. July 31, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190629123944/https://brasil.elpais.com/brasil/2019/02/01/cultura/1549052359_482486.html. June 29, 2019. live.
- Web site: O descaso que corrói o patrimônio, de parque arqueológico à casa de Santos Dumont. 4 September 2018 . The neglect that erodes the heritage, from archaeological park to the home of Santos Dumont. July 31, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190405030825/https://brasil.elpais.com/brasil/2018/09/03/politica/1536002917_439429.html. April 5, 2019. live.
External links