Tag: Antiquities

  • King Croesus’s golden brooch to be returned to Turkey

    King Croesus’s golden brooch to be returned to Turkey

    Lydian Hoard treasure in shape of winged seahorse, sold to pay gambling debts and replaced with a fake, to be taken home

    Constanze Letsch in Istanbul

    guardian.co.uk, Sunday 25 November 2012 13.45 GMT

    The original left and the 005

    The original, left, and the fake golden brooch in the shape of a winged seahorse

    The original, left, and the fake golden brooch in the shape of a winged seahorse from the Lydian Hoard in Turkey.

    For thousands of years it lay underground, part of the buried treasure of the legendarily wealthy King Croesus. But since being illegally excavated in the 1960s, it has been stolen, replaced by a fake, sold to pay off gambling debts and has allegedly brought down a curse on its plunderers.

    Now the 2,500-year-old golden brooch is to be returned home to Turkey, where it will be given a special place in a new national museum.

    The Turkish culture minister, Ertugrul Günay, has announced that German officials have agreed to return the missing artefact, a brooch in the form of a winged seahorse, possibly as early as this year.

    The brooch is part of the Lydian Hoard, known in Turkey as the Karun Treasure, which was looted from iron-age burial mounds in western Turkey in 1965. The artefacts were sold on, eventually to be exhibited in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art in the 1980s.

    After a six-year legal battle that reportedly cost Turkey £25m, it was repatriated in 1993 and went on display in the Usak museum. But in 2006, after an anonymous tipoff, the brooch on show was discovered to be a fake, with the original missing again.

    After an investigation the director of the museum, Kazim Akbiyikoglu, who had been instrumental in recovering the artefacts from the US, was arrested with 10 others. Akbiyikoglu admitted selling museum treasures to pay off gambling debts and was jailed for 13 years. He blamed his misfortune on an ancient curse said to afflict those who handle the treasure.

    Popular rumour has it that all seven men involved in the illegal digs of the burial mounds died violent deaths or suffered great misfortune.

    Although the details of the brooch’s latest recovery are unclear, Turkish officials are delighted. “I am very happy to hear that the piece will finally return home,” said a culture and tourism official, Serif Aritürk, who is responsible for the museum in Usak. “Since I was in office in 2005 and 2006 I felt personally responsible for the theft ; our directorate came under a lot of pressure.” He added that he had never doubted the brooch would reappear. “No collector would have dared to acquire such a well-known artefact, it was clear that the thieves would not find a buyer easily.”

    Journalist and archaeology expert Ömer Erbil, who investigated the brooch’s theft in 2006, agreed: “For the past three years the ministry of culture has exerted great pressure to retrieve stolen artefacts from Turkey. Museums and collectors are increasingly hesitant to buy them. It is partly due to the ministry’s efforts that we were able to find the brooch relatively fast,” he said.

    Turkey has recently launched what some call “an art war” to repatriate antiquities from museums around the world that it says were stolen and smuggled out of the country illegally. According to official numbers, 885 artefacts were returned in 2011 alone.

    Critics argue that foreign museums helped to preserve countless historical treasures from destruction or theft.

    However, according to Erbil, the 2006 heist marked a crucial turn: “Attitudes to cultural treasures and museums underwent a revolutionary change in Turkey. The ministry of culture works relentlessly to protect artefacts and to make sure that they are properly and safely displayed.”

    The Archaeological Museum in Usak is only able to display 2,000 of its 41,600 historical objects. A larger museum, to open in December 2013, is being built to house the 450 pieces of the Lydian collection in its entirety. With the retrieval of the hippocamp brooch, Aritürk hopes the treasure’s curse has finally been lifted. “The piece will receive a place of honour in the new museum. Once it returns home, I am sure tourists and those that appreciate history and art will follow.”

    via King Croesus’s golden brooch to be returned to Turkey | World news | guardian.co.uk.

  • Will Turkey Try to Take Back Antiquities in the Dallas Museum of Art’s Collection?

    Will Turkey Try to Take Back Antiquities in the Dallas Museum of Art’s Collection?

    Will Turkey Try to Take Back Antiquities in the Dallas Museum of Art’s Collection?

    By Peter Simek

    November 9th, 2012 11:35am

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    Over the past year, Turkey has been stepping up its efforts to reclaim art and antiquities the country claims were smuggled-out illegally and now reside in some of the world’s top museums. In March, officials from the Turkish government requested that the Metropolitan Museum of Art return 18 items from its collection that the museum acquired through the Norbet Schimmell Collection, a former Met trustee whose gift to the museum was touted at the time as one of the most important ever.

    In September, the New York Times reported on Turkey’s newly “aggressive” tactics, as some have dubbed them, to claim antiquities. One source of friction comes from a Unesco convention regulation recognized by most museum directors that allows museums to keep objects that were removed from their country of origin before 1970. Turkey, though, now cites an Ottoman-era law, claiming that it has the right to any objects removed after 1906.

    So does the Dallas Museum of Art have any items in its collection that Turkey will claim? That’s the rumor I heard yesterday, so I reached out to the museum. And while there have been no formal requests as of yet, a spokesperson with the museum did say that the DMA is currently organizing a visit by a delegation from Turkey next month.

    Image: Vessel with Suspension Lugs (5th millennium BC) 5 x 5 1/2 x 4 1/8 in. Ceramic, paint. Dallas Museum of Art, Foundation for the Arts Collection, gift of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Clark. Country of origin: Turkey.

    via Will Turkey Try to Take Back Antiquities in the Dallas Museum of Art’s Collection? | FrontRow.

  • Turkey’s War Against The Art World: What Does It Really Mean?

    Turkey’s War Against The Art World: What Does It Really Mean?

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    Istanbul’s 16th century “New Mosque”

    Last week, the New York Times ran a story describing what it called “an aggressive campaign by Turkey to reclaim antiquities it says were looted,” calling attention to a situation which spotlights the unique position of that country in relation to the rest of the world – as much culturally as politically – at a time when its global role is rapidly gaining power.

    And even as the repatriation demands — which particularly gained momentum during the past spring – heighten tensions between Turkey and its European neighbors, they expose in many ways the path it seems to be carving for its future: one of continued independence, to be sure, but of greater influence and power, particularly in the Middle East.

    It makes sense, of course, that the Turks would seek restitution of their heritage, as any country would. What is surprising in this case, however, is the vehemence and strong-arming tactics with which they are attempting to do it, and the belligerence of the country’s Cultural Minister, Ertegrul Günay, who has described the private owners of some Turkish artifacts he claims were stolen as “unscrupulous”, and whose tactics include blackmailing countries who contest his demands by refusing museum loans and, worse, revoking archeological permits. (When I contacted his office for comment, an English-speaking press officer informed me that he could not speak about the matter and hung up on me.  After a Turkish journalist friend called the Ministry of Culture and chided them for this behavior, another officer promised to respond to questions sent via e-mail. She did not.)

    Yet all of this is playing out even while, as far as the owners of many of these items are concerned, the treasures in question were covered by a 1970s UNESCO resolution, ratified by Turkey in 1981, that, as the Times writes, “lets museums acquire objects that were outside their countries of origin before 1970.”

    So why has Turkey changed its mind? And what does its new drive to retrieve these artifacts really signal?

    The first answer is simple: Nationalism. Always strong in Turkey, where portraits of Ataturk grace virtually every restaurant, shop, and home, nationalist sentiment is on the rise these days, a result largely of the country’s strengthened economy, and of its new roles as an ideological beacon to many in the wake of the “Arab Spring.”   Yet it is a nationalism with a particular bent, and one that diverges from the attitudes that have characterized the country for the past 90 years – since the rise of Kemal Ataturk an the founding of the Republic: under its conservative leader, Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his AKP, or Justice and Development Party, Turkey is looking to its roots.  The secular elite, long the engine that ran Turkey’s politics and culture, are losing their stronghold to a religious youth that, thanks to economic changes and new policies allowing women to wear headscarves at universities (for the first time in 20 years), are better educated and so, more influential than ever before.  Turkey’s pre-Kamal past, of course, is more popular among this group, and is particularly well-suited to reflect and help promote the goals of an Islamic government.

    But not all the artifacts in question relate to the Ottomans, by any means; among those being pursued, for instance, are 6th-century Byzantine silver items now in the collection of Dumbarton Oakes in Washington, D.C.; a Cycladic marble sculpture, previously belonging to Nelson Rockefeller, now owned by the Cleveland Museum of Art; and last year, the Metropolitan Museum returned what a Turkish journalist described as “a stolen hoard of Lycian gold.”

    Which brings us to the second reason – the one that powers all things political: money.

    In 2011, Turkey ranked 6th in world tourism, with $25 billion in revenues generated by 31.4 million tourists – and Günay aims to bring the country into the list of the top five, with a goal to generate $50 billion a year from 50 million tourists annually by 2023, when the country marks the 100th anniversary of the Republic.

    Much of that revenue comes from Turkish cultural sites and museums, according to the Anatolia News Agency. Income from these sources, Günay claims, has surged from 70 million Turkish lira (about $40 million) in 2007, when he took office, to 250 million ($140 million) in 2011.    Now the country plans to invest in the cultural tourism sector with a bang: a 25,000 square meter “Museum of Civilizations” is scheduled to open in Ankara, the nation’s capital, in time for the anniversary year.  “Our dream,” Günay told German magazine Der Spiegel last July, “is the biggest museum in the world.”

    It is telling, however, that this museum is aimed at focusing on civilizations past, not present. As a contemporary art boom explodes in the intellectual centers of Istanbul, conservatives have responded with reactionary dismay. To date, despite the popularity and international success of the Istanbul Biennale, the annual Contemporary Istanbul art fair, and a host of contemporary art galleries in Istanbul; despite strong sales of Turkish contemporary art at Sotheby’s and Christie’s London, not one of the country’s many modern and contemporary museums is sponsored by the state; they are all private enterprises, a combination of vanity and philanthropy initiated and maintained by wealthy members of the secular intellectual elite.  And much of it is part of a push towards further Westernization and the desire for EU membership.

    By contrast, Prime Minister Erdogan has visibly turned Eastward, and even as Turkey’s president, Abdullah Gül, presses still towards the EU, Erdogan continues to institute policies that alienate Turkey from its European neighbors while coquettishly courting Iran.

    These more recent antagonisms are not likely to help.  In fact, der Spiegel is quick to call Turkey on its hypocrisy, noting that “during the Turkish invasion of northern Cyprus in 1974, the occupiers emptied out entire rooms,” and that Egypt’s Obelisque of Theodosius now stands in Istanbul. A furious Hermann Parzinger, who oversees Berlin’s Pergamon Museum, clearly agreed,  telling the New York Times that Turkey “should be careful about making moral claims when their museums are full of looted treasures. “  (Even so, the Times quotes Günay a saying – bizarrely – that “artifacts, just like people, animals, or plants, have souls and historical memories. When they are repatriated to their countries, the balance of nature will be restored. “ One can’t help but wonder if this applies, too, to something like the Hagia Sophia mosque,  created as the center of the Eastern Orthodox church in the 4th century.)

    But the worst of it is that these tensions, it seems to me, are likely to have long-term deleterious repercussions – and it is Turkey who will most suffer.  How much greater would it be to see the Museum of Civilizations, say, open up to the modern world, making possible museum loans from places like the Met, as well as from MoMA and, say, the Stedelijk or the Pompidou, allowing works by Van Gogh and Mondrian, by Basquiat and Warhol, by Gerhard Richter and Richard Serra and more to appear in Turkish museums for the first time. What riches it would bring the Turkish people.

    Alas, it seems that this is not to be.

    Tags: Abigail R. Esman, Ankara, Ataturk, Istanbul, national heritage, Turkey, UNESCO

  • Headless Roman Statues Found In Turkey Show Antiquities’ Reuse

    Headless Roman Statues Found In Turkey Show Antiquities’ Reuse

    By: Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer

    Published: 09/18/2012 08:21 AM EDT on LiveScience

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    Two headless Roman statues have been discovered holding up a medieval-era platform in Turkey — an example of antiquities being reused by later generations as humble building material.

    The ancient statues have lost their heads, but their clothing suggests that one was a representation of a local notable and the other an imperial office-holder, said R.R.R. Smith, who directs the New York University Excavations at Aphrodisias, an ancient Roman city in what is now Turkey. One statue dates back to about A.D. 200, while the other is from A.D. 450 or so. They were likely recycled by the 600s, Smith told LiveScience.

    “Preliminary study of the pottery associated with the deposition of the statues suggests they were built into the platform already in the seventh century,” Smith said. “That is, in the immediately ‘post-antique’ early medieval period.”

    Aphrodisias was near a marble quarry, and its statuary art flourished between about 30 B.C. and A.D. 600, during the era of the Roman Empire. Since 2008, Smith and his colleagues have been excavating “Tetrapylon Street,” a city boulevard that ran from the city’s sanctuary of the goddess Aphrodite to a major temple called the Sebasteion. The dig has turned up signs of what Smith called a “major conflagration” — collapsed columns, broken glass, fragmented mosaics and burned wood all in a chaotic mix. In August, archaeologists excavating above this layer of destruction found a built-up platform with two headless statues, positioned at a right angle from one another, used as a foundation. [See Images of the Statues and Dig Site]

    The speaker and the governor

    The near life-size statues probably lost their heads before they were repurposed as building material, Smith said. But even without faces, the statues tell a tale. The first, the one likely sculpted around A.D. 200, wears a cloak and tunic, the uniform of a notable citizen. The man was sculpted in a rhetorical posture, his right hand gesturing as if in mid-speech and his left hand grasping a carved scroll so detailed that the spiraling rolls of papyrus are visible.

    via Headless Roman Statues Found In Turkey Show Antiquities’ Reuse.

  • Penn Museum makes deal with Turkey for ‘Troy gold’

    Penn Museum makes deal with Turkey for ‘Troy gold’

    PHILADELPHIA — A Philadelphia archaeology museum will indefinitely loan ancient jewelry known as “Troy gold” to Turkey in an arrangement that will allow the museum to host a future exhibit of artifacts related to King Midas, officials announced Tuesday.

    The deal is part of what Penn Museum officials called a landmark agreement with the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism to work more collaboratively on field work and exhibitions over the next several years.

    “It will lead to great opportunities — for Penn, for Philadelphia and for the wider archaeological community — to experience more of Turkey’s rich cultural history and heritage in the future,” museum director Julian Siggers said.

    Ertugrul Gunay, the Turkish culture and tourism minister, said the 24 pieces of jewelry are among thousands of historical artifacts returned to the country over the past two decades, according to the state-run Anadolu news agency.

    The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology acquired the early Bronze Age objects in 1966 from a now-defunct art dealership. But the origin of the items — including earrings, pendants and pins — was unclear.

    The purchase eventually led museum officials in 1970 to adopt a then-unusual policy of refusing to acquire artifacts of unknown provenance that might have been looted.

    Siggers said the jewelry remained in storage for years. Then in 2009, scholars found a grain of dirt on one piece that allowed them to identify the collection as most likely being from the historic city of Troy. Discussions for the objects’ return began with Turkish officials last year.

    Brian Rose, an archaeology professor who co-directs the museum’s excavations at Troy and Gordion in Turkey, said the jewelry is on indefinite loan because the Troy provenance is likely, but not certain.

    The pieces are expected to be displayed at a new archaeological museum being built in Troy that will open within two years, according to the Anadolu Agency. Troy is in northwest Turkey near the city of Canakkale, about 150 miles from Istanbul.

    In 2016, the Penn institution will host an exhibition of treasures excavated from what is believed to be the tomb of King Midas’ father. It also will include “an incredibly impressive funerary assemblage” of objects from other sites, which Rose said will offer an overview of ancient aristocratic burial customs.

    Midas ruled the kingdom of Phrygia, near present-day Gordion, in the mid-8th century B.C. A Penn archaeologist discovered the tomb in 1957, and the university has worked there for decades.

    Many artifacts uncovered there have been displayed in the Turkish capital of Ankara, Rose said.

    The agreement announced Tuesday includes continuing Turkish support for Penn excavations at Gordion.

    via Penn Museum makes deal with Turkey for ‘Troy gold’ – CBS News.

  • Colossal human sculpture unearthed in Turkey

    Colossal human sculpture unearthed in Turkey

    A newly discovered statue of a curly-haired man gripping a spear and a sheath of wheat once guarded the upper citadel of an ancient kingdom’s capital.

    turkey statue

    In Pictures: Disappearing Act – The ancient town of Hasankeyf in Turkey

    The enormous sculpture, which is intact from about the waist up, stands almost 5 feet (1.5 meters) tall, suggesting that its full height with legs would have been between 11 and 13 feet (3.5 to 4 m). Alongside the statue, archaeologists found another carving, a semicircular column base bearing the images of a sphinx and a winged bull.

    The pieces date back to about 1000 B.C. to 738 B.C. and belong to the Neo-Hittite Kingdom of Patina in what is now southeastern Turkey. They were found at what would have been a gate to the upper citadel of the capital, Kunulua. An international team of archaeologists on the Tayinat Archaeological Project are excavating the ruins.

    The Neo-Hittites were a group of civilizations that arose along the eastern Mediterranean after the collapse of the Hittite Empire around 1000 B.C. When the statues were carved, the area was emerging from the Bronze Age and entering into the Iron Age.

    The male sculpture boasts a beard and inlaid eyes made of white and black stone. He wears a crescent-shaped pectoral shield on his chest and lion-head bracelets on his arms. On his back, a long inscription records the accomplishments of Suppiluliuma, the name of a king of Patina already known to have banded together with Syrian forces in 858 B.C. to face an invasion by Neo-Assyrians. [Top 10 Battles for the Control of Iraq]

    The column base stands about 3 feet (1 m) tall, with a diameter of 35 inches (90 centimeters). The column likely stood against a wall, as only the front is decorated with carvings of a winged bull flanked by a sphinx.

    The presence of such statues was common in Neo-Hittite royal cities, the researchers said. The newly discovered carvings would have guarded a passageway of gates to the heart of the city.

    “The two pieces appear to have been ritually buried in the paved stone surface of the central passageway,” Tayinat Project director Tim Harrison, a professor of archaeology at the University of Toronto, said in a statement.

    The passageway and gates seems to have been destroyed in 738 B.C., when Assyrian forces conquered the Neo-Hittite city. The area then appears to have been paved over and turned into a courtyard. Archaeologists have also uncovered smashed Neo-Hittite slabs and pillars as well as two carved life-size lions.

    via Colossal human sculpture unearthed in Turkey – CSMonitor.com.