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Thieves pull switch on gold artifacts of King Croesus
1.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 23 Aug 2008 Sat 05:36 am

An unknown number of pieces from a treasure of King Croesus, king of the Lydians in the sixth century B.C., have been stolen from the Archeological Museum in Usak, Turkey, and replaced with fakes.

 

At least two of the artifacts were at the centre of a long legal battle over stolen antiquities between Turkey and New York´s Metropolitan Museum of Art.

 

The Met had returned the pieces — a golden brooch in the shape of a sea horse, and a coin — in 1993 after a dispute that began in 1970.

The Turkish prosecutor´s office says nine people, including the Archeological Museum´s director Kazim Akbiyikoglu, have been detained for questioning in connection with the switch.

Turkish Culture and Tourism Minister Atilla Koc confirmed a newspaper report of the theft on Sunday. "Unfortunately the incident is true," he said, according to Associated Press.

"You can maintain external security, but we haven´t yet invented a tool to protect them from people on the inside," he said.

The Met had displayed 363 artifacts from the "Lydian Hoard" that it purchased in the 1960s. Turkish officials said the collection had been stolen from burial mounds in the Usak region in 1966.

Turkey launched a lawsuit in 1987 that led to the eventual return of the artifacts to Turkey.

King Croesus ruled the warrior-like Lydians in what was then known as Asia Minor. Greek literature, including writings by Aeschylus, referred to the amount of gold owned by the Lydians and used in everyday artifacts, originating the expression "rich as Croesus."

The theft lends a new twist to the increasingly heated issue of returning disputed artifacts to their country of origin.

In February, the Met agreed to return to Italy 21 artifacts that experts said were illegally excavated. Italy and Greece both have claims against the Getty Museum in Los Angeles. And Egypt´s Supreme Council of Antiquities is beginning to press its case for the return of artifacts from around the world.

Met director Philippe de Montebello had criticized Turkey for displaying the Croesus items in Usak, in a museum visited by just 769 people in the last five years.

The theft may have happened five months ago, Turkish officials admitted, but the incident has only been officially confirmed recently.

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/story/2006/05/30/croesus-theft.html

 

2.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 23 Aug 2008 Sat 05:56 am

Counterfeit Antique Chic

If you were "as rich as Croesus," would you wear costume jewelry?

Apparently the original King Croesus preferred the real thing -- and would probably not have been pleased that an undisclosed number of objects representing his 6th century BCE reign have been stolen from a Turkish museum and replaced with fakes.  Among the missing items from the collection, which the Metropolitan Museum of Art returned to Turkey in 1993, is the winged seahorse broach at left. 

Counterfeit Chic asks, "What´s the big deal?"  Or, to put it somewhat more eloquently, why does it matter whether an artifact under glass in a museum is the real thing or a virtually identical copy? 

Archaeologists or historians will plausibly argue that only the real thing -- whatever that thing happens to be -- can truly yield information about ancient creative techniques or be subjected to scientific tests to determine age, composition, etc.  But for most of us, an expert replica is equally informative.  Why, then, would we make a special trip to see an historic object but hardly glance at the version in the museum shop?

Alexander Stille takes on this question in his book, The Future of the Past, describing the common Chinese practice of making and displaying museum-quality copies of artifacts -- and the culture clashes that can ensue when Western curators refuse to accept these substitutes in traveling exhibits. 

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