San Francisco Chronicle

Egypt says Rosetta stone must be returned

- By Jack B. Jeffery

CAIRO — The debate over who owns ancient artifacts has been an increasing challenge to museums across Europe and America, and the spotlight has fallen on the most visited piece in the British Museum: The Rosetta stone.

The inscriptio­ns on the dark grey granite slab became the seminal breakthrou­gh in decipherin­g ancient Egyptian hieroglyph­ics after it was taken from Egypt by forces of the British empire in 1801.

Now, as Britain’s largest museum marks the 200-year anniversar­y of the decipherme­nt of hieroglyph­ics, thousands of Egyptians are demanding the stone’s return.

“The British Museum’s holding of the stone is a symbol of Western cultural violence against Egypt,” said Monica Hanna, dean at the Arab Academy for Science, Technology & Maritime Transport, and organizer of one of two petitions calling for the stone’s return.

The acquisitio­n of the Rosetta stone was tied up in the imperial battles between Britain and France. After Napoleon Bonaparte’s military occupation of Egypt, French scientists uncovered the stone in 1799 in the northern town of Rashid, known by the French as Rosetta. When British forces defeated the French in Egypt, the stone and over a dozen other antiquitie­s were handed over to the British under the terms of an 1801 surrender deal between the generals of the two sides.

It has remained in the British Museum since.

Hanna’s petition, with 4,200 signatures, says the stone was seized illegally and constitute­s a “spoil of war.” The claim is echoed in a near identical petition by Zahi Hawass, Egypt’s former minister for antiquitie­s affairs, which has more than 100,000 signatures. Hawass argues that Egypt had no say in the 1801 agreement.

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