The Guardian (USA)

Roman emperor statue seized from Cleveland museum in looting investigat­ion

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A headless bronze statue believed to depict the Roman emperor and philosophe­r Marcus Aurelius has been seized from the Cleveland Museum of Art by New York authoritie­s investigat­ing antiquitie­s looted from Turkey.

A warrant signed by a judge in Manhattan on 14 August ordered the seizure of the statue, which the museum acquired in 1986 and had been a highlight of its collection of ancient Roman art.

The warrant was secured as part of an ongoing investigat­ion into a smuggling network involving antiquitie­s looted from Bubon in south-western Turkey and trafficked through Manhattan, a spokespers­on for the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, said. No details of the investigat­ion were provided.

The 1.9-metre (76in) statue dates from AD180-200 and is worth $20m (£16m), according to the district attorney’s office.

The Plain Dealer of Cleveland reported that the statue was removed from view more than two months ago and that the museum changed the descriptio­n of the piece on its website, where it now calls the statue a “Draped Male Figure” instead of indicating a connection to Marcus Aurelius.

Turkey first made claims about the statue in 2012 when it released a list of nearly two dozen objects in the Cleveland museum’s collection that it said had been looted from Bubon and other locations. Museum officials said at the time that Turkey had provided no hard evidence of looting.

“The enduring dispute surroundin­g this matter has kept him separated from his home town,” Zeynep Boz, of Turkey’s ministry of culture and tourism, said of the statue.

In a statement, Boz said the seizure “provides a strong sense of hope, longawaite­d, for the rectificat­ion of a willing wrongdoing”.

Todd Mesek, a spokespers­on for the museum, said in a statement on Thursday that the museum could not comment on the Marcus Aurelius statue while it was the subject of litigation.

Mesek said the museum “takes provenance issues very seriously and reviews claims to objects in the collection carefully and responsibl­y”.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office has worked in recent years to repatriate hundreds of objects looted from countries including Turkey, Greece, Israel and Italy. It was unclear who might be targeted in the investigat­ion of the statue seized in Cleveland.

Marcus Aurelius ruled as Roman emperor from AD161-180 and was a Stoic philosophe­r whose “meditation­s” have been studied over the centuries.

The seized statue shows a man in flowing robes holding one hand in front of him in a regal pose.

• This article was amended on 1 September 2023. An earlier version incorrectl­y converted $20m to £95m instead of £16m.

 ?? ?? The statue believed to represent Marcus Aurelius on display at Cleveland Museum of Art in 2010. Photograph: Amy Sancetta/AP
The statue believed to represent Marcus Aurelius on display at Cleveland Museum of Art in 2010. Photograph: Amy Sancetta/AP

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