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Why Britain should want to return the Parthenon Marbles, argued by a professor of Aegean history

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What should museums do with antiquitie­s taken during colonial periods? It’s the question at the heart of discussion­s between the Greek and British government.

The chief items being debated are the Parthenon Marbles, also known as the Elgin Marbles, that have been kept in the British Museum in London for over 200 years.

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The Parthenon marbles are a collection of sculptures built between 447 and 438 BCE that used to adorn the Acropolis of Athens. Between 1801 and 1812, the 7th Earl of Elgin authorised the removal of the sculptures and their transport to Britain. At the time, he claimed he had been legally allowed to do so by the ruling Ottoman Empire.

Greece has tried to have the marbles returned since 1983 and Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has made it a central part of his recent meetings with UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

In the most recent meeting, the British Museum’s deputy director, Dr Jonathan Williams, argued that “much of the frieze was in fact removed from the rubble around the Parthenon,” and not sawed off from the building.

Greece’s culture minister, Lina Mendoni, however accused Elgin of theft. “Lord Elgin used illicit and inequitabl­e means to seize and export the Parthenon sculptures, without real legal permission to do so, in a blatant act of serial theft.”

Moral arguments, not legal ones

Evangelos Kyriakidis, director of The Heritage Management Organisati­on and previously senior lecturer in Aegean Prehistory at the University of Kent believes the museum needs to see past the legal arguments though.

“The British Museum says there is no legal argument, and I don’t think that is true. But I don’t want to go into the legal argument, as I think the moral argument is much stronger,” he says.

The reason the Parthenon Mar-bles are such a sticking point for Greece, Kyriakidis argues, is that it’s not just an important monument, it’s a national symbol.

“It’s sovereignt­y. Having a Greek national symbol in a museum called the British Museum is totally wrong. It’s like if the Crown Jewels were in Greece,” he says.

The withholdin­g of a key na-tional symbol is elemental to why the British Museum is an anachronis­tic institutio­n, in Kyriakidis’ mind. “The British Museum portrays itself as a global museum, but that gives the complete wrong message to the world. Why would you call it a British museum where you learn mainly about Persia or Greece, but there is barely any room for British antiquitie­s in it. It’s a remnant of a colonial era.”

There are three main concerns that are often expressed by people when defending the right of the British Museum to keep other cultures' antiquitie­s such as the Parthenon Marbles. 1) The native countries aren’t capable of housing the artefacts, 2) if they start giving some things back, they’ll have to give everything back and be left with nothing, and 3) the British Museum is a great place for people to come to for free to learn about world history.

Kyriakidis believes that there is a good argument against each of these points. “It’s true that Iraq does not have a good museum

yet to hold their antiquitie­s. It may do in the future, but it doesn’t at the moment. But Greece does. Greece has a purpose-built museum.”

“Another argument is the avalanche effect. If they give us the Parthenon marbles back, then Italy starts asking for this, Iran starts asking for that, and so on,” Kyriakidis explains. But this argument doesn’t hold when you consider that Greece is just asking for the Parthenon marbles back, and not all of its antiquitie­s.

“The British Museum actually includes the sculptural elements of another World Heritage site from Greece. The Temple of Apollo Epikourios at Bassai is the first temple by the same architect as the Parthenon and is in the British Museum,” Kyriakidis says.

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A future for the British Museum

Kyriakidis says the British Museum’s third fear, that they would lose their free hub of education in London, is also solved by looking at a possible solution.

What if, instead of the British Museum hoarding antiquitie­s from its colonial past, instead it establishe­d open relationsh­ips with other countries, opening up the possibilit­y for fascinatin­g temporary exhibition­s.

The room that the Parthenon marbles are held in was one the British Museum was initially built around. “How about we use that as an exhibition space for temporary displays of antiquitie­s Greece can send Britain?” Kyriakidis suggests. “Then the British Museum could show even more of Greek culture without keeping antiquitie­s hostage.

The possibilit­ies for exchange then become almost unlimited, with the museum able to regularly change what it shows off by collaborat­ing with other government­s. It’s also a potential money maker as shown by the way the Victoria and Albert Museum generates funds by circulatin­g over 30 exhibition­s worldwide.

For Kyriakidis, this is both an educationa­l and diplomatic opportunit­y. For British children who may visit the museum a handful of times in their childhoods, now there would be reason to attend multiple times a year.

“It could also be exploited for public diplomacy as a fantastic gesture to the Greek people,” Kyriakidis suggests, noting that the majority of Brits are also in favour of returning the marbles.

Historical­ly, the British govern-ment has wiped its hands of the issue, claiming it is up to the British Museum as an independen­t organisati­on. “That annoys Greece a lot,” Kyriakidis says.

“We all know the British Muse-um gets funding from the British government. That funding comes with strings attached,” Kyriakidis says. “So, yes the British Museum is ultimately independen­t. But as long as the Museum accepts the funding of the government, then the museum will have to take the government’s decisions into account.”

The longer the government waits, the less likely the fantastic opportunit­y for sharing antiquitie­s will come about, Kyriakidis fears. “There are committees for the return of the marbles in something like 20 countries. The government of Australia asked Britain to return the Parthenon Marbles back to Greece. Politician­s from the US have done so too.”

“This is not just about Greece and Britain,” Kyriakidis says. “It would be a huge positive gesture to the rest of the world.”

 ?? ?? Greek Foreign Minister George Papandreau, accompanie­d by his wife Anda and daughter Margarita view the Elgin Marbles at the British Museum in London Sunday, June 4, 2000. ALASTAIR GRANT/AP
Greek Foreign Minister George Papandreau, accompanie­d by his wife Anda and daughter Margarita view the Elgin Marbles at the British Museum in London Sunday, June 4, 2000. ALASTAIR GRANT/AP
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