Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ancient gold ring finds way back to Greece

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ATHENS, Greece – A more than 3,000-year-old gold signet ring that was stolen from an Aegean island in World War II, crossed the Atlantic, was bought by a Nobel Prize-winning Hungarian scientist and ended up in a Swedish museum has found its way back to Greece.

It was the latest in a series of coups by Greek authoritie­s seeking the return of works plundered from the antiquitie­s-rich country – even though an initial effort by the Swedish museum to return the ring apparently fell between the cracks of 1970s bureaucrac­y.

The Greek culture ministry said Friday the gold Mycenaean-era work from Rhodes, decorated with two facing sphinxes, was willingly returned by Swedish officials who provided full assistance with documentin­g the artifact and its provenance.

Greek experts confirmed the identification, and the piece was handed over in Stockholm by Vidar Helgesen, executive director of the Nobel Foundation, to which the ring had been bequeathed by the Hungarian biophysici­st.

The foundation, which presents annual awards for outstandin­g achievemen­t in several fields, had given it to the Museum of Mediterran­ean and Near Eastern Antiquitie­s in Stockholm.

Greek Culture Minister Lina Mendoni thanked the Nobel Foundation and Swedish authoritie­s for the repatriati­on., saying it “shows their respect for modern Greece and our constant efforts to fight the illegal trafficking of cultural goods.”

The ring, which would have been a status symbol in the 3rd millennium B.C., was discovered in 1927 by Italian archaeolog­ists in a Mycenaean grave near the ancient city of Ialysos on Rhodes. The southeaste­rn Aegean island belonged to Italy until it was incorporat­ed in Greece after WWII.

The Ministry of Culture and Sports said the ring was stolen from a museum on Rhodes during the war – with hundreds of other pieces of jewelry and coins that remain missing – and surfaced in the United States.

It was brought to the U.S. during the 1950s or 1960s by Georg von Békésy, a biophysici­st and art collector whose collection was donated to the Nobel Foundation after his death and from there distribute­d to several museums.

 ?? GREEK CULTURE MINISTRY VIA AP ?? A gold Mycenaean-era work from Rhodes, decorated with two facing sphinxes, was willingly returned by Swedish officials.
GREEK CULTURE MINISTRY VIA AP A gold Mycenaean-era work from Rhodes, decorated with two facing sphinxes, was willingly returned by Swedish officials.

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