Zürcher Nachrichten - Dutch museum removes 'priceless' Benin Bronzes for return to Nigeria

EUR -
AED 4.307541
AFN 82.316835
ALL 98.105818
AMD 450.056062
ANG 2.099079
AOA 1075.564784
ARS 1392.704442
AUD 1.794294
AWG 2.114184
AZN 1.989639
BAM 1.956913
BBD 2.366546
BDT 143.351561
BGN 1.956913
BHD 0.442152
BIF 3490.986218
BMD 1.172917
BND 1.495551
BOB 8.098608
BRL 6.427003
BSD 1.172067
BTN 100.225024
BWP 15.669915
BYN 3.835682
BYR 22989.179838
BZD 2.35434
CAD 1.605513
CDF 3379.174622
CHF 0.938187
CLF 0.028458
CLP 1092.041324
CNY 8.41275
CNH 8.408623
COP 4735.294175
CRC 591.136331
CUC 1.172917
CUP 31.082309
CVE 110.327772
CZK 24.789018
DJF 208.718752
DKK 7.459109
DOP 69.729673
DZD 151.215035
EGP 58.269733
ERN 17.59376
ETB 158.336286
FJD 2.628801
FKP 0.854785
GBP 0.854887
GEL 3.190049
GGP 0.854785
GHS 12.131903
GIP 0.854785
GMD 83.871437
GNF 10154.777624
GTQ 9.014129
GYD 245.109457
HKD 9.207061
HNL 30.625425
HRK 7.541267
HTG 153.657424
HUF 398.953734
IDR 19043.77914
ILS 3.971727
IMP 0.854785
INR 100.232234
IQD 1535.37356
IRR 49409.143232
ISK 142.110415
JEP 0.854785
JMD 187.836871
JOD 0.831621
JPY 169.33057
KES 151.486189
KGS 102.505917
KHR 4698.67334
KMF 493.20936
KPW 1055.625635
KRW 1600.539587
KWD 0.358667
KYD 0.976756
KZT 609.746919
LAK 25275.380586
LBP 105016.049538
LKR 351.499988
LRD 234.413371
LSL 20.989642
LTL 3.46332
LVL 0.709486
LYD 6.347612
MAD 10.582521
MDL 19.849293
MGA 5152.931793
MKD 61.565028
MMK 2462.734297
MNT 4203.632025
MOP 9.477792
MRU 46.742594
MUR 52.969058
MVR 18.059846
MWK 2032.356322
MXN 22.07495
MYR 4.959681
MZN 75.019806
NAD 20.989642
NGN 1810.679374
NIO 43.134542
NOK 11.806011
NPR 160.360238
NZD 1.93653
OMR 0.449356
PAB 1.172067
PEN 4.160167
PGK 4.834751
PHP 66.398428
PKR 332.423935
PLN 4.240067
PYG 9353.321631
QAR 4.272231
RON 5.088582
RSD 117.246708
RUB 92.143506
RWF 1692.462937
SAR 4.397002
SBD 9.790738
SCR 17.201087
SDG 704.331193
SEK 11.116102
SGD 1.496883
SHP 0.921729
SLE 26.383762
SLL 24595.494431
SOS 669.781076
SRD 44.331587
STD 24277.020799
SVC 10.255835
SYP 15250.101378
SZL 20.98494
THB 38.230655
TJS 11.556475
TMT 4.11694
TND 3.426449
TOP 2.747088
TRY 46.793831
TTD 7.955526
TWD 34.135422
TZS 3088.557254
UAH 48.868004
UGX 4213.397239
USD 1.172917
UYU 47.216864
UZS 14752.393466
VES 125.037095
VND 30607.277952
VUV 139.463428
WST 3.210847
XAF 656.330423
XAG 0.032593
XAU 0.000358
XCD 3.169868
XDR 0.816264
XOF 656.330423
XPF 119.331742
YER 284.139603
ZAR 20.909187
ZMK 10557.665653
ZMW 27.748788
ZWL 377.678904
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Dutch museum removes 'priceless' Benin Bronzes for return to Nigeria
Dutch museum removes 'priceless' Benin Bronzes for return to Nigeria / Photo: Freek VAN DEN BERGH - ANP/AFP

Dutch museum removes 'priceless' Benin Bronzes for return to Nigeria

Clad in protective blue surgical gloves, a Dutch museum worker gingerly unhooks a precious decorative artefact before gently laying it down on a pillow and wrapping it in dozens of layers of special paper.

Text size:

The artefact is a "Benin Bronze", a priceless cultural object looted from modern-day Nigeria more than 120 years ago, now being removed from display and returned to its rightful home.

The Wereldmuseum (World Museum) in Leiden is restoring 113 of the ancient sculptures, the latest single return, as pressure mounts on Western governments and institutions to hand back the spoils of colonial oppression.

"These don't belong here. They were violently taken, so they need to go back," museum director Marieke van Bommel told AFP in an interview.

"This is a typical example of looted art," added the 50-year-old.

The story of the Benin Bronzes is one of violence and tragedy. It began when nine British officers were killed on a trade mission to the then independent kingdom of Benin, in the south of present-day Nigeria.

The British reaction was fierce. London deployed a military expedition to avenge its officers. The troops killed several thousand locals and torched Benin's capital city.

They looted the royal palace, stealing hundreds of artworks, including the Benin Bronzes.

Most of the ornate bronzes were then sold to finance the expedition, auctioned off or sold to museums across Europe and the United States.

This was in 1897 and 128 years later, Nigeria is still negotiating the bronzes' return around the world -- with mixed results.

The Netherlands has agreed to return 119 bronzes in total -- six more are coming from Rotterdam -- and Germany has also begun handing back its loot.

However, the British Museum in London has refused to return any of its famed collection.

A law passed in 1963 technically prevents the museum from giving back the treasures.

- 'Follow this example' -

Museum director Van Bommel hopes the Dutch example will be picked up around the world.

"I think we all agree that this collection doesn't belong in European museums. We do hope that other countries will follow this example," she said.

The collection is priceless, said Van Bommel. "It's a cultural value, so we never put a price on it."

The museum in Leiden has also restored hundreds of pieces of colonial loot to Indonesia, a former Dutch colony, Mexico and a community in the United States.

Van Bommel said they had struck a deal to keep four of the bronzes on loan, so visitors can continue to learn their story.

"We want to talk about the expedition, but also about the whole subject of restitution," she said.

In the meantime, the museum will replace their collection with a display of contemporary art.

As for the bronzes, they will be shipped to Lagos in mid-June.

Former Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari declared in 2023 that the returned works would be given to the Oba -- the traditional ruler -- and not to the Nigerian state.

There are plans to build a museum in Benin City in southern Edo state, where the bronzes will have pride of place.

F.Carpenteri--NZN