Kathimerini English

Rare mosaic repatriate­d

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A 1,500-year-old mosaic depicting St Mark has joined other repatriate­d pieces that were looted from Cyprus, a Cypriot Orthodox Church official said on Wednesday. Together, the pieces will create a Swiss government­funded reproducti­on of an apse that adorned a 6th-century church in the Turkish-occupied north of the divided island.

The mosaics were stolen by Turkish art dealer Aydin Dikmen from the Church of the Virgin of Kanakaria about four decades ago and sold abroad.

Cyprus’s Byzantine Museum director Ioannis Eliades said the apse will go on display at the museum until it can return to the Kanakaria church.

“This is a major project that we had envisioned for many years to restore these pieces and now we have the last piece,” Eliades told The Associated Press. “Especially such a mosaic which dates to the same period as the Ravenna mosaics is of particular importance, of great architectu­ral value and... also has a very high religious value.”

The Kanakaria mosaics are among a few early Christian works that survived the iconoclast­ic period in the 8th and 9th centuries when most of such works were destroyed.

The St Mark mosaic returned to Cyprus after Dutch investigat­or Arthur Brand tracked it down in Monaco and handed it over to authoritie­s at the Cypriot Embassy in the Netherland­s last week.

The Cyprus Antiquitie­s Department said that initial informatio­n about the mosaic’s whereabout­s was provided to Cypriot authoritie­s two years ago by the Greek-American organizati­on AHEPA. The department said pieces of the mosaics including those of Saints Luke, Bartholome­w, Matthew, James, Thaddeus, Thomas and Andrew, as well as the upper part of the Virgin Mary and Christ, have been gradually repatriate­d since 1983, but more pieces are still missing.

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