Monday, June 9, 2014

Military Dictator Sticks his Nose into UK Collectors' Business

The Egyptian Military Dictatorship, fresh from demanding the US Government stop the legal trade in undocumented Egyptian artifacts, has now demanded that the Borough of Northampton stop the sale of an Egyptian artifact long in its possession. Will British local government stand up to these imperialists against such meddling? Surely so.

Will our US State Department also show some spine and stand up for US small businesses, collectors and Museums? Sadly, probably not given indications that the MOU with Egypt has already been pre-judged after some behind the scenes lobbying by politically connected archaeological organizations with a vested interest in the corrupt status quo in that troubled country.

Friday, June 6, 2014

Questions about Turkey's "Art War" with the Rest of the World


Turkey is today pursuing an aggressive retentionist policy towards antquities of which it claims absolute ownership and wants "returned" from the museums that preserve and display them:  Matthias Schulz 'Art War': Turkey Battles to Repatriate Antiquities Speigel July 20, 2012. The government wants to stock the galleries of a 25,000-square-meter (270,000-square-foot) "Museum of the Civilizations" in the Turkish capital Ankara with items from our museums. Their new museum ("the biggest museum in the world") will be opened in 2023 so as to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the Turkish Republic. There could not be a clearer assertion of the relationship between retentive antiquities policies and nationalism. Yet:

the Turks themselves can claim little credit for their archeological treasures. Their ancestors, the Seljuks, only arrived from the steppes of Central Asia in the 11th century. Christian Constantinople, now known as Istanbul, fell in 1453. Before then, however, Hittites, Greeks, Romans and Byzantines had built enormous palaces, monasteries and amphitheaters in the region. Whether it was Homer, Thales or King Midas -- they all lived on the other side of the Dardanelles. When the new Muslim masters took over, the region's illustrious past faded into obscurity. The water-pipe-smoking caliphs were more concerned with pursuing their own interests.  
Modern Turkey is embracing the heritage of the ancient lands that it now occupies and appropriating it for itself. A powerful antiquities bureaucracy has grown up in recent years. But their effectiveness in protecting that heritage is doubtful in the face of corruption:
a well-organized local mafia has continued to wreak havoc in Turkey. For example, in the early 1960s, among the remains of the ancient city of Boubon in southwestern Turkey, thieves discovered a Roman temple filled with more than 30 life-size bronze imperial statues. It would have been a global sensation -- but the public never saw the statues. Instead, unbeknownst to the authorities, they all vanished into the voracious pipelines of the global antiquities trade. 
Or perhaps the authorities knew all about it, it is presumably not easy to move 30 life size bronze statues around without being seen. In any case, how much of a moral right do the Turks have to repatriation of artefacts when they have objects removed from other countries in their museums?
Critics are openly airing their displeasure with Turkey's behavior online. Instead of lodging complaints, they argue, Turkey ought to return the Obelisk of Theodosius, which stands in Istanbul, to Egypt. Indeed, the Ottomans themselves weren't squeamish when it came to appropriating cultural goods. They stole artifacts in Mecca and allowed a private British citizen to pry away the frieze from the Parthenon in Athens -- in return for a lot of money. During the Turkish invasion of northern Cyprus in 1974, the occupiers emptied out entire museums. "The Turks are too determined to depict themselves as victims of cultural oppression to accept that foreign museums and archaeologists have also played a part in saving their treasures," the Economist wrote in May. For example, when the German archeologist Carl Humann entered the majestic ruins of Pergamon in 1864, he saw large numbers of lime kilns in use. Workers were smashing ancient marble columns and throwing the pieces into the fire. After reaching a deal with the Ottoman government, he then brought the Pergamon Altar back to Berlin to be the centerpiece of a museum of the same name. But Turkey has long called for its repatriation.
Turkey’s aggressive measures against large international museums has raised controversy in the art world. It has returned the focus of repatriation again to the question: Who Owns Antiquity?

Saturday, May 31, 2014

world’s largest hoard of Celtic coins on display at Jersey Museum


 


Two years after a pair of metal detectorists found the world’s largest collection of buried Celtic coins, the Le Catillon II hoard is about to go on public display in a tale of life in northern France and the Channel Islands, covering the Roman occupation of Gaul and featuring a Roman chariot burial from Normandy. Reg Mead and Richard Miles spent 30 years searching for the coins before triumphing in 2012. More than 70,000 pieces are thought to be clumped in the solid mound of metal and earth, weighing three quarters of a ton and left as it was when it was gingerly lifted from the soil. Read more.

Artifact Trove at Egyptian Tomb Illuminates Life Before Pharaohs

 

A recently discovered tomb at a key Egyptian settlement has yielded the largest trove of artifacts ever found in a tomb there—including a young man’s burned and scattered bones—and is shedding new light on the ancestors of the pharaohs. Part of a cemetery complex that predates the formation of the ancient Egyptian state, the find is one of the richest “predynastic” burials archaeologists have ever seen.
The tomb, at the site known as Hierakonpolis, yielded 54 objects, including combs, spearheads, arrowheads, and a figurine made of hippopotamus ivory. Arrayed around the tomb are dozens more burials, including possible human sacrifices and exotic animals. Read more.

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Dead Sea Scrolls: Fragments of biblical treasure are up for sale



Associated Press, 'Dead Sea Scrolls: Fragments of biblical treasure are up for sale', May 26, 2013.

Parts of the Dead Sea Scrolls are up for sale — in tiny pieces. Nearly 70 years after the discovery of the world's oldest biblical manuscripts, the Palestinian family who originally sold them to scholars and institutions is now quietly marketing the leftovers — fragments the family says it has kept in a Swiss safe deposit box all these years. Most of these scraps are barely postage-stamp-sized, and some are blank. But in the last few years, evangelical Christian collectors and institutions in the U.S. have forked out millions of dollars for a chunk of this archaeological treasure. This angers Israel's government antiquities authority, which holds most of the scrolls, claims that every last scrap should be recognized as Israeli cultural property, and threatens to seize any more pieces that hit the market.
Read more here.

Pot Found by Flinders Petrie Turns up in Private Hands

 


A battered pot found in a garage in Cornwall, broken in antiquity and broken again and mended with superglue some 5,500 years later, was treasure – but the scruffy little cardboard label it held is now unlocking a lost history of finds from excavations in Egypt scattered across the world in the late 19th century. The pot came with an odd family legend that back in the 1950s it was accepted in lieu of a fare by a taxi driver in High Wycombe. Alice Stevenson, curator at the Petrie Museum in London, which among its 80,000 objects has the original excavation records and hundreds of pieces from the same Egyptian cemetery, believes the story is true and may even have identified the mysterious passenger. Read more.

Friday, May 9, 2014

Israeli Archeologist Says he has Found King David's Citadel



Eli Shukron, an archeologist formerly with Israel's Antiquities
Authority, walks in the City of David archeological site
near Jerusalem's Old City. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)

Associated Press, 'Israeli archaeologist says he has found King David's citadel', Oregonlive May 08, 2014:
An Israeli archaeologist says he has found the legendary citadel captured by King David in his conquest of Jerusalem, rekindling a longstanding debate about using the Bible as a field guide to identifying ancient ruins. The claim by Eli Shukron, like many such claims in the field of biblical archaeology, has run into criticism. It joins a string of announcements by Israeli archaeologists saying they have unearthed palaces of the legendary biblical king, who is revered in Jewish religious tradition for establishing Jerusalem as its central holy city — but who has long eluded historians looking for clear-cut evidence of his existence and reign. The present-day Israeli-Palestinian conflict is also wrapped up in the subject. The $10 million excavation, made accessible to tourists last month, took place in an Arab neighborhood of Jerusalem and was financed by an organization that settles Jews in guarded homes in Arab areas of east Jerusalem in an attempt to prevent the city from being divided. The Palestinians claim east Jerusalem, captured by Israel in 1967, as the capital of a future independent state. Shukron, who excavated at the City of David archaeological site for nearly two decades, says he believes strong evidence supports his theory. 
Read more here