Saturday, June 30, 2018

A Moment in Time from a Vanished Life...



A find by the excavators at the Isola Sacra necropolis - a toddler’s footprint in an ancient Roman roof tile. You can imagine the children playing in the workshop and running across the wet clay tiles while their parents shout at them! This is the appeal of collecting antiquities, a moment in time frozen in tangible form for eternity.


Moslem Egypt Shuns its Ancient History



Mohammed Nosseir  a liberal politician from Egypt, is a strong advocate of political participation and economic freedom. He has written an important article acknowledging the truth about the capabilities of the Egyptians to look after the heritage of their land ('Egypt will pay a steep price for shunning its ancient history', Arab News June 29, 2018)
Egypt possesses millions of highly valuable and universally admired artifacts, and has always had a smuggling problem. The current tendency to favor government megaprojects while overlooking the importance of ancient Egyptian antiquities to the development of our country has encouraged many to engage in the illicit trafficking of antiquities, a practice that has been increasing substantially, especially in the last few years.  [...] Meanwhile, as it focuses on projects that might help to feed citizens in the future, the government is paying less attention to protecting and promoting our antiquities [...]. Our government has still not provided proper professional management for the astonishing monuments and artifacts built by the pharaohs thousands of years ago — this kind of shunning of our history has prompted several nations to claim that the ancient civilization of the pharaohs does not belong to us. Minimal effort is needed to better protect and promote our ancient history, which could potentially generate billions in revenues. Instead, we have entrusted the management of our most valuable antiquities to a handful of bureaucrats, some of whom are engaged in smuggling. The Egyptian government needs to be extremely firm with antiquities smugglers. This is more a matter of enforcing existing laws than promulgating new ones. Many nations whose antiquities are certainly less valuable than ours are significantly more knowledgeable about the protection and promotion of antiquities than we are. Egypt needs to assign these nations as the caretakers of our antiquities to better display them to international visitors

Friday, June 22, 2018

Who Guards the Guardians?



Museum night watchman from the Archaeological Museum of Santorini in Greece is one of two people charged with stealing/possessing a number of artifacts taken from the museum's storage facility ( Santorini museum guard arrested over stolen artifacts).
Authorities said they found the man in possession of 15 clay pots dating to the 17th century BC that had been discovered at the prehistoric settlement of Akrotiri, as well as three figurines (two stone and one clay) and a crystal glass object from the Sanctuary of Aphrodite in Ancient Thera, among other valuable artifacts. A second person has been arrested in connection with the same case, according to the police, but no details have been released regarding his or her identity or role. An investigation into the suspects’ activities is under way, though the police said that they are believed to have been active for at least a year, stealing valuable objects from the museum’s collection that are not on display and selling them on the illegal antiquities market.