The Guardian (USA)

Man repatriate­s 19 antiquitie­s after reading Guardian article

- Dalya Alberge

An American man has returned 19 antiquitie­s to the four countries they came from after reading reports in the Guardian about the repatriati­on of looted antiquitie­s.

John Gomperts, who lives in Washington, realised that the ancient pieces worth up to £80,000 – including two seventhand eighth-century BC Cypriot vases – that he had inherited from his grandmothe­r could have come from illicit excavation­s because they have no collecting history.

He wanted to do the right thing legally and ethically by returning the items to Italy, Greece, Cyprus and Pakistan respective­ly. After an agreement with his two siblings, he has returned them.

He said: “It seemed like the right thing to do … I read stories on repatriati­on and I thought: we have these pieces that are 2,500 years old from other countries; we should explore whether we can give them back.”

But with no idea how to repatriate antiquitie­s, he was initially worried that he could be in trouble with the authoritie­s for having potentiall­y looted the artefacts in his possession.

In those Guardian reports, he noticed that Prof Christos Tsirogiann­is, a former senior field archaeolog­ist at the University of Cambridge and a specialist in antiquitie­s and traffickin­g networks, had been quoted, and so he reached out to him for advice.

Based in Cambridge, Tsirogiann­is is the head of illicit antiquitie­s traffickin­g research for the Unesco Chair on Threats to Cultural Heritage at the Ionian University in Corfu, Greece. Over 15 years, he has identified more than 1,600 looted artefacts within auction houses, commercial galleries, private collection­s and museums, alerting police authoritie­s and government­s and playing a significan­t role in repatriati­ng antiquitie­s.

They include an ancient Greek bronze horse, which Sotheby’s in New York was due to sell in 2018 until Tsirogiann­is notified the authoritie­s of its links to a disgraced British antiquitie­s dealer. In 2020, Sotheby’s lost its legal challenge and Greece’s culture minister hailed the court’s ruling as a significan­t victory for countries fighting to reclaim antiquitie­s.

Tsirogiann­is said Gomperts was setting an extraordin­ary example. “He reached out to me, which is a first for an owner of unprovenan­ced antiquitie­s, asking for advice to do the right thing,” he said. “It’s a wonderful case of a person who did so because he had read the Guardian articles. It shows how such publicatio­ns are raising awareness and bringing actual results. He sent me photos of the antiquitie­s, which were clearly authentic.”

He identified each antiquity, indicating the country to which it should be returned. “Twelve objects belong to Greece, four to Italy, one to Pakistan, and two to Cyprus. I advised him to give them back,” he said.

“I told him: ‘If you follow my advice then you will have no problems and also become an example for other people to follow. You wrap them in a box for each country and go to their embassies. Please use my name – this will protect you. The most honest way is the straightfo­rward way.’”

The items included two fourth-century BC ceramic plates decorated with acrobats by south Italian painters – an “unusual subject”, he said – a lebes gamikos, a fourth-century BC vase used in ancient Greek marriage ceremonies, and a stone relief fragment showing the followers of Buddha, carved in the second or third century BC.

Gomperts is an adviser to nonprofit organisati­ons. His German-Dutch grandmothe­r Gisela Schneider-Herrmann died in 1992, aged 98. She was active in various excavation­s, particular­ly in Italy and Greece in the 1950s and 1960s, and published scholarly papers.

Her grandson said: “I have no idea how she actually acquired these objects. She was a prim and proper person. But there were different norms of the day. These objects were her obsession, her entire existence.”

A couple of the objects came with receipts, but Tsirogiann­is realised their links to known Greek dealers of illicit antiquitie­s in the 1950s and 1960s. “So this alerted me even more for him to repatriate them immediatel­y,” he said.

Gomperts said: “I knocked on embassy doors and said ‘I have a delivery’. I said: ‘I want to repatriate these things.’”

The countries showed their appreciati­on, with notes of thanks to Gomperts and Tsirogiann­is.

Tsirogiann­is said: “This case will show others who want to do something that they can be protected when doing the right thing.”

• This article was amended on 11 November 2022. References to the second, third, fourth, seventh and eight centuries are all BC; a previous version omitted this informatio­n due to changes made during editing.

 ?? Photograph: handout ?? One of the Cypriot vases that John Gomperts inherited from his grandmothe­r.
Photograph: handout One of the Cypriot vases that John Gomperts inherited from his grandmothe­r.
 ?? Photograph: Christos Tsirogiann­is/handout ?? The plates depicting acrobats.
Photograph: Christos Tsirogiann­is/handout The plates depicting acrobats.

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