The Daily Telegraph

Army sifts own museum for looted artefacts

- By Craig Simpson

A BRITISH Army museum has called in an academic to explore its colonial connection­s and reveal which of its artefacts were looted from Ethiopia.

The King’s Own Royal Regiment Museum in Lancaster is understood to house objects taken during a 19th-century campaign in Abyssinia, now Ethiopia, which have a deep cultural significan­ce.

Eyob Derillo, an Abyssinian specialist and author of histories of magic, has been engaged to establish which objects were seized.

He said: “This project holds immense potential to shed new light on a historical event that has shaped the region’s past. By fostering collaborat­ion, inclusivit­y, and academic rigour, the museum aims to contribute to cultural understand­ing, ultimately creating a more nuanced and accurate narrative surroundin­g the Abyssinia expedition.”

The museum has pledged to establish which of its artefacts were looted by British forces. The project comes amid calls from Ethiopia and its supporters in the UK, including a former Archbishop of Canterbury, to return looted treasures seen as sacred by many in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.

Robin Ashcroft, chairman of the museum’s trustees, said that it would aim not only to tell the stories of “the regiment’s soldiers”, but also those “we met on the battlefiel­d”.

He added: “Our ambition is to now work in partnershi­p with stakeholde­rs from Ethiopia in bringing a fully rounded perspectiv­e and involvemen­t in what was a truly an extraordin­ary event.”

The “event” was the 1868 invasion of Abyssinia by British forces to secure hostages. The conflict resulted in the sacking of the capital of the fortress of Magdala, the death of Emperor Tewodros II, and the looting of sacred texts and revered objects.

It is understood that the museum may house a piece of shirt used to wipe blood from the body of Tewodros.

There have been repeated calls, including by Lord Carey, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, to return a set of “tabots”, or sacred tablets, held in the British Museum, which are significan­t to the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.

 ?? ?? Eyob Derillo, an Abyssinia expert, studies items at the Army museum in Lancaster
Eyob Derillo, an Abyssinia expert, studies items at the Army museum in Lancaster

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