Greece Pondering Buying the Marbles Back!
The salient bits from a very interesting AFP item:
Greece’s Bavarian-born King Otto considered offering Britain cash or antiquities in the 19th century in exchange for marbles removed from the Acropolis, previously unpublished historical files have shown.
“There is a document to the foreign ministry, subsequently forwarded to Otto’s minister in London, with instructions on how to request the marbles back,” Acropolis Museum director Demetrios Pantermalis told a conference on Monday.
“There was a discussion on what should be offered in exchange, and the throne asked how much the marbles would cost on the European art market, possibly with the notion of purchasing them,” Pantermalis said, according to the semi-state Athens News Agency.
The talks involved the return of architectural elements from the Parthenon and Athena Nike temples dedicated to Athens’ protecting goddess, which had been removed some four decades earlier on the orders of British ambassador Lord Elgin.
“There was a royal proposal for Greece to offer some antiquities of secondary importance in return for the Athena Nike sculptures,” Pantermalis said.
The official documents, dating from between 1834 and 1842, were penned two years after Otto ascended the Greek throne under supervision of Britain, France and Russia, who had earlier helped liberate the country from the Ottoman Empire.
- via Greece mulled buying Acropolis marbles from Britain (AFP)
… hmmm … that might have implications in an ownership dispute ….
Iactetur bloggus:
This Day in Ancient History: ante diem xii kalendas apriles
ante diem xii kalendas apriles
- Festival of Mars continues (day 21)
- Quinquatrus continues (day 3) — originally a one-day festival with rites in honour of Minerva, by Ovid’s day it had been increased to five days, with the last four involving gladiatorial bouts
- 1766 — death of Richard Dawes (Classical scholar)