The Borneo Post

Lebanon museum unveils artefacts looted during civil war

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BEIRUT: Lebanon’s national museum on Friday unveiled five ancient sculptures, including a Phoenician bull’s head returned by the United States, that were looted during the civil war.

The life-size 4th century BC white marble bull’s head, the star artefact among the works that were all looted in 1981, had been loaned to New York’s Metropolit­an Museum of Art (Met).

The five pieces were discovered on the Phoenician site of Eshmun, near the southern port city of Sidon, during excavation­s carried out in the 1960s and 1970s.

“We are committed, as much as we can, to repatriati­ng pieces stolen during the war,” Lebanese Culture Minister Ghattas Khoury said during a ceremony at the National Museum of Beirut.

Lebanon’s civil war lasted 15 years from 1975 to 1990.

The five statues were stolen from a storeroom in Byblos and later surfaced “on the internatio­nal antiquity market”, the culture ministry said in a statement. They were repatriate­d over the past two months.

The bull’s head had been exhibited at the Met and was spotted as part of a drive by Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.

The official has made it a priority to track stolen artwork and the repatriati­on of the Lebanese sculptures capped months of cooperatio­n between Beirut and the US authoritie­s.

The repatriate­d works unveiled on Friday also included a 6th century BC marble statue that had ended up in the same private collection as the bull’s head.

The other pieces were a 4th century BC statue that had been in the possession of a private New York collector, a 5th century BC marble torso that turned up in Germany and a statue of a young boy which customs seized at the northern port of Tripoli. — AFP

 ??  ?? Photo shows repatriate­d marble sculptures dating back to 4th to 6th centuries on display during a ceremony at Beirut National Museum in the Lebanese capital. — AFP photo
Photo shows repatriate­d marble sculptures dating back to 4th to 6th centuries on display during a ceremony at Beirut National Museum in the Lebanese capital. — AFP photo

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