Zürcher Nachrichten - Iran fights to recover stolen antiquities

EUR -
AED 4.275912
AFN 76.945742
ALL 96.507033
AMD 443.502545
ANG 2.084172
AOA 1067.669546
ARS 1669.615862
AUD 1.754156
AWG 2.095752
AZN 1.979584
BAM 1.95493
BBD 2.344656
BDT 142.426589
BGN 1.95493
BHD 0.438905
BIF 3439.568645
BMD 1.164307
BND 1.508029
BOB 8.044418
BRL 6.33336
BSD 1.164082
BTN 104.665401
BWP 15.466114
BYN 3.34681
BYR 22820.40996
BZD 2.341258
CAD 1.610277
CDF 2598.732168
CHF 0.936687
CLF 0.027361
CLP 1073.35122
CNY 8.231765
CNH 8.230635
COP 4422.730924
CRC 568.646829
CUC 1.164307
CUP 30.854126
CVE 110.21593
CZK 24.208254
DJF 207.297707
DKK 7.468805
DOP 74.506828
DZD 151.014766
EGP 55.297703
ERN 17.464599
ETB 180.565709
FJD 2.631857
FKP 0.872874
GBP 0.873789
GEL 3.137823
GGP 0.872874
GHS 13.242104
GIP 0.872874
GMD 84.994444
GNF 10115.496406
GTQ 8.91703
GYD 243.551567
HKD 9.063324
HNL 30.660349
HRK 7.534581
HTG 152.392152
HUF 381.731319
IDR 19431.753727
ILS 3.767358
IMP 0.872874
INR 104.724139
IQD 1525.021034
IRR 49031.867707
ISK 149.007685
JEP 0.872874
JMD 186.327044
JOD 0.825436
JPY 180.689329
KES 150.582958
KGS 101.819216
KHR 4660.924876
KMF 491.33727
KPW 1047.875385
KRW 1715.96691
KWD 0.357407
KYD 0.970168
KZT 588.717893
LAK 25243.761042
LBP 104246.887486
LKR 359.070136
LRD 204.88878
LSL 19.729516
LTL 3.437895
LVL 0.704277
LYD 6.328183
MAD 10.751913
MDL 19.807182
MGA 5192.688126
MKD 61.612569
MMK 2444.575233
MNT 4130.230657
MOP 9.335044
MRU 46.422332
MUR 53.640008
MVR 17.932029
MWK 2018.601284
MXN 21.162059
MYR 4.786443
MZN 74.410886
NAD 19.729516
NGN 1688.338127
NIO 42.840926
NOK 11.772625
NPR 167.464442
NZD 2.014838
OMR 0.446781
PAB 1.164182
PEN 3.913058
PGK 4.939801
PHP 68.653379
PKR 326.360799
PLN 4.229232
PYG 8006.435397
QAR 4.243211
RON 5.091044
RSD 117.347755
RUB 89.441675
RWF 1693.745915
SAR 4.36976
SBD 9.582933
SCR 15.771732
SDG 700.335953
SEK 10.943923
SGD 1.508534
SHP 0.873532
SLE 27.599807
SLL 24414.925724
SOS 664.104329
SRD 44.975958
STD 24098.796527
STN 24.489097
SVC 10.186465
SYP 12873.549183
SZL 19.714223
THB 37.112262
TJS 10.680845
TMT 4.086716
TND 3.41488
TOP 2.803371
TRY 49.55243
TTD 7.891487
TWD 36.43004
TZS 2840.6353
UAH 48.871442
UGX 4118.166521
USD 1.164307
UYU 45.529729
UZS 13926.799548
VES 296.376506
VND 30691.122782
VUV 141.301541
WST 3.246799
XAF 655.665087
XAG 0.019914
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.146597
XCG 2.098066
XDR 0.815437
XOF 655.665087
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.745094
ZAR 19.719145
ZMK 10480.15708
ZMW 26.914017
ZWL 374.90626
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    78.35

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.25

    -0.3%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    16.14

    -0.56%

  • NGG

    -0.5000

    75.41

    -0.66%

  • GSK

    -0.1600

    48.41

    -0.33%

  • VOD

    -0.1630

    12.47

    -1.31%

  • AZN

    0.1500

    90.18

    +0.17%

  • RELX

    -0.2200

    40.32

    -0.55%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.62

    -0.34%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.43

    -0.21%

  • RIO

    -0.6700

    73.06

    -0.92%

  • BCC

    -1.2100

    73.05

    -1.66%

  • BTI

    -1.0300

    57.01

    -1.81%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.79

    +0.29%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    23.55

    +1.4%

  • BP

    -1.4000

    35.83

    -3.91%

Iran fights to recover stolen antiquities
Iran fights to recover stolen antiquities / Photo: ATTA KENARE - AFP

Iran fights to recover stolen antiquities

Decorated glazed bricks almost 3,000 years old are on display at Iran's National Museum after a four-decade search disrupted by war and an international legal battle.

Text size:

Lions and winged cows with human heads, horses and bulls with a goat's horn, kneeling men and women and other mythological figures decorate the work, created by the Mannaeans who lived in northwestern Iran in the first millennium BC.

The 51 square bricks are painted with a glazed coating on a black, brown, light blue, yellow or white background.

Their discovery and repatriation "is a series of incredible adventures," Youssef Hassanzadeh, an archaeologist with the museum, told AFP.

It is also the latest example of Middle Eastern and African countries recovering stolen antiquities which have ended up in Western countries.

According to Hassanzadeh, the story began after the 1979 Islamic revolution when a farmer, Mirza Ali, discovered painted ceramic bricks while cultivating his field. They had been used to decorate a temple near his village in West Azerbaijan province.

"People were looting and selling glazed bricks, taking advantage of the absence of government control," said Hassanzadeh, who organised the exhibition at the museum, where visitors peer at the bricks through glass cabinets.

- 'A unique collection'

A few years later in 1985, during war with Iraq, Iranian authorities sent a group of archaeologists, protected by soldiers, to the village. They started to dig and seized some bricks but it was too late for the others.

Smugglers had already shipped some of them overseas, where a number entered private collections and museums, the archaeologist said.

The story took a new turn when the British Museum learned that an Iranian family had offered to sell a set of glazed bricks in Chiasso, on the Italian-Swiss border. In 1991, the museum sent its curator John Curtis to purchase the collection.

But Curtis realised the bricks came from the West Azerbaijan site "and advised the British Museum and other European museums not to buy it, because it is a unique collection which must not be divided and must be returned to its country of origin," Hassanzadeh said.

The Iranian owner of the collection had a different view. He was not prepared to return the artifacts from Switzerland.

"In 2008, the Swiss police seized the objects. The case went to court. French archaeologist Remy Boucharlat, who led excavations in Iran, confirmed the collection's "identity", the Tehran-based museum said in a statement.

Legal proceedings dragged on for more than a decade, with a lawsuit filed by the National Museum in 2015, and pressure from Iranian diplomats.

"Finally on December 20, 2020, the collection returned to us," said Jebrael Nokandeh, curator of the National Museum which is exhibiting the bricks until Tuesday.

A separate drawn-out legal saga concluded in October, 2019 when the National Museum opened an exhibition of around 300 cuneiform clay tablets returned from the United States.

Other artifacts have also come back, but with far fewer complications.

Nokandeh, who is also an archaeologist, said a descendant of a Frenchman who lived in Iran during World War II approached Iran's cultural adviser in Paris last year to say "that he had a collection of Iranian antiquities."

Those 29 pieces, from the Bronze Age to the Islamic period, are now also on display at the museum, while the quest to recover other stolen and lost artifacts from the country's rich history continues.

"We are in talks with the United States as well as with Australia to return objects," Nokandeh said.

Y.Keller--NZN