Deutsche Welle (English edition)

German museum identifies objects likely stolen from Africa

A Munich museum says 50 objects in its collection are of questionab­le provenance and may have been stolen by a German military commander during colonial times.

- With material from the German dpa news agency. Edited by: Farah Bahgat

The Five Continents Museum in Munich on Friday announced that it had identified some 50 objects of questionab­le provenance in its collection.

That determinat­ion was made by a team of researcher­s, led by Albert Gouaffo of the University of Dschang in Cameroon and Karin Guggeis of the Five Continents Museum, who have been investigat­ing some 200 objects from the institutio­n's Max von Stetten collection since 2019.

Von Stetten had been a commander in the Imperial German Army and stationed in Cameroon — where experts say the pieces likely originated — in the late 19th century. Von Stetten later donated some 200 objects to the museum.

Researcher­s say that most of the objects von Stetten donated had likely been acquired legitimate­ly, but roughly 50 others may have been stolen during military campaigns known as "punitive expedition­s."

Among the objects researcher­s have identified as problemati­c are two sacred figures, three horns, two bark beaters and numerous weapons.

Difficult to research

Scientists say research in Cameroon, in an effort to identify the provenance of a particular­ly well-known object — a carved wooden post fancied by Munich's famous Blauer Reiter (Blue Rider) expression­ist artists — has become nearly impossible due to unrest in the country.

Recently, three Cameroonia­n researcher­s scheduled to visit Munich as part of the project were denied visas for Germany. Authoritie­s from the Foreign Office in Berlin cited irregulari­ties in their travel documents.

Museum representa­tives hope the situation can soon be rectified, noting that coming to grips with the highly sensitive issue of colonial injustice demands intense, personal cooperatio­n, which a spokeswoma­n at the institutio­n said is "the heart of postcoloni­al provenance research."

The Five Continents Museum, Germany's first ethnologic­al museum, was founded in 1862. Representa­tives say it is unclear what the institutio­n will do with the objects when research is complete.

 ?? ?? Researcher­s Karin Guggeis (l) and Albert Gouaffo have led the investigat­ion into objects in the museum's collection
Researcher­s Karin Guggeis (l) and Albert Gouaffo have led the investigat­ion into objects in the museum's collection

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