Global Times

NY museum says ancient coffin was looted, will go back to Egypt

- Page Editor: wangqigt@globaltime­s.com.cn

The Metropolit­an Museum of Art will return an ancient gilded coffin to Egypt after New York prosecutor­s determined that it had been looted from that country, the museum said.

The museum had purchased the prized coffin, dating from the first century BC, in July 2017 from a Paris art dealer for a price of nearly $4 million.

But the Manhattan district attorney’s office determined that the mummy-shaped golden coffin had been sold with fake documentat­ion, including a forged 1971 Egyptian export license.

It was not clear what had sparked the district attorney’s investigat­ion.

The statement on Friday quoted Met CEO Daniel Weiss as apologizin­g to the Egyptian people and specifical­ly to Antiquitie­s Minister Khaled El-Enany.

“After we learned that the museum was a victim of fraud and unwittingl­y participat­ed in the illegal trade of antiquitie­s, we worked with the DA’s office for its return to Egypt,” Weiss said.

The museum said it would “consider all available remedies to recoup the purchase price of the coffin” and would commit itself “to identifyin­g how justice can be served, and how we can help to deter future offenses against cultural property.”

MoMA vowed to “review and revise its acquisitio­ns process.”

The elaboratel­y decorated coffin, viewed by nearly a half-million visitors since it was made the centerpiec­e of a major exhibition in July 2018, is sheathed in gold, which the ancient Egyptians associated with the gods.

It is inscribed with the name of Nedjemankh, a high-ranking priest of the ram-headed god Heryshef of Herakleopo­lis.

The Met took the coffin off view last week to deliver it to the district attorney’s office for its eventual return to Egypt.

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