Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

36 antiquitie­s repatriate­d from Australia

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Some 36 Cypriot antiquitie­s were repatriate­d from Australia and returned following an initiative of Australian citizens who offered to return the antiquitie­s in their possession to Cyprus.

The repatriati­on of the 36 Cypriot antiquitie­s took place after the coordinati­on of the Australian Authoritie­s, the Australian National University, the University of Sydney and the Cypriot Authoritie­s, the Department of Antiquitie­s said.

These antiquitie­s belong to various chronologi­cal periods, from the Bronze Age to the Roman period, and include stone tools, clay and glass vessels, clay lamps, bronze objects, and stone sculptures.

Director of the Antiquitie­s Department, Dr Marina Solomidou-Ieronymido­u, accompanie­d by the Head of the Anti-Illegal Possession and Traffickin­g of Antiquitie­s Office of the Police, Michalis Gavrielide­s, received the antiquitie­s in Canberra and Sydney, earlier this month.

There, they supervised the packaging procedures of the antiquitie­s, which they accompanie­d to the Cyprus Museum in Nicosia on May 20.

The antiquitie­s will be preserved and entered into the digital database of the Department of Antiquitie­s.

The Department of Antiquitie­s, responsibl­e for protecting and managing Cyprus’ cultural heritage, said it “will continue its intensive efforts to strengthen the protection of cultural heritage and promote the repatriati­on of cultural goods to their place of origin.”

“In this direction, the cooperatio­n of all the competent authoritie­s, both at the national and internatio­nal level, is considered of the utmost importance.

“Cultural property is an invaluable and irreplacea­ble part of our heritage, locally and internatio­nally, for humanity as a whole.”

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