When troves are treasured: priceless relics far from homeThe National, January 21. 2010, by Ben East Oh the
irony. This, of
course, is all happening in the same country that “owns”
Greece’s Parthenon Marbles (famously known as the Elgin Marbles),
Egypt’s Rosetta Stone and Iran’s Cyrus Cylinder. The
British Museum is not alone. Almost every major capital city exhibits treasures
of dubious provenance, and increasingly, the countries they’ve been
“liberated” from are trying to get them back. Egypt’s vice
minister of culture, the archaeologist Zahi Hawass, essentially travels to the
world’s museums with a shopping list of what he believes is his
country’s rightful property. The old argument that the grand, well-funded museums of the West are the best, safest and most responsible custodians of these antiquities is steadily running out of steam, too. The Parthenon Marbles that weren’t taken from Greece now reside in a quite beautiful new museum at the foot of the Acropolis in Athens, the missing sections pointedly reproduced in white plaster. It’s incredibly difficult to suggest that they wouldn’t be looked after in one of the most stunning exhibition spaces of the 21st century. In this
atmosphere of cultural repatriation, it’s no surprise that Birmingham
Museum and Art Gallery and the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery in Stoke wish
to display the Anglo-Saxon hoard near to where it was found. The 1,800 items of
gold and silver are just as emblematic of the wealth of the ancient Midland
kingdom called Mercia as the Parthenon Marbles are of Athens. That’s
because the real enemy, for those who would like to see more artefacts and
treasures repatriated, is a combination of time and law. The Lindisfarne
Gospels were taken to London in the 17th century, and 200 years have passed
since Elgin indulged in what, even at the time, Lord Byron called cultural
vandalism. Nevertheless, he was acting with permission from the ruling Ottoman
government. And if
that’s not a big enough obstacle, there’s the emotional argument
from the museums: that sending one major artefact “home” would set
a precedent that would eventually empty the great museums of their treasures. http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100121/LIFE/701209982/0/life
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