Chasing the Lydian Hoard
Author Sharon Waxman digs into the tangle over looted artifacts between the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Turkish government
- By Sharon Waxman
- Smithsonian.com, November 14, 2008, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
This was an astonishing admission by a major American museum. The Met had bought pieces that within a matter of weeks had gone directly from a group of looters, through middlemen, to the storerooms of the museum. Documents proved that the museum officials knew that these pieces were likely looted and essentially hid them for some 20 years. Nonetheless, the museum resisted Turkey’s demands for more than a decade and fought the lawsuit for six years, until finally acknowledging its actions.
Back in Turkey, the triumph was complete. Acar’s campaign had been taken up by the local Usak region, and the museum curator Kazim Akbiyikoglu—now his dear friend and ally—adopted the cause of stopping looting in his region. Acar’s slogan, “History is beautiful where it belongs,” became a poster that was found in libraries, classrooms, city buildings, and shops. The local Usak newspaper beat the drum for the return of the Lydian hoard. In October 1993, just a month after the Met’s concession, the artifacts arrived back in Turkey amid great celebration.
The lawsuit emboldened Turkey to chase other objects that had been taken improperly. The government pursued the auction house Sotheby’s for trafficking in looted artifacts and sued for objects being held in Germany and London. It also went after the Telli family, a ring of smugglers—through whom a billion dollars’ worth of stolen antiquities flowed—that Acar had written about in Connoisseur magazine. (The family sued Acar; he was acquitted. He then got death threats. He ignored them. He later learned that the plan was to kidnap him, tie him up, and ship him with an oxygen tank, to a Swiss museum.) The Getty Museum relinquished a sculpture from a Perge sarcophagus that had been sliced up and sold by looters. A German foundation gave up other portions of the same sculpture. Turkey became known as a leader in the battle against looting. By the latter half of the 1990s, the looters were on the defensive. Smugglers looked to work elsewhere. Turkey’s lawsuits made a clear statement of its intention to assert the country’s cultural rights.
For two years the treasures of the Lydian hoard were displayed in the Anatolian Civilizations Museum in Ankara, before being transferred in 1995 to Usak, to an aging one-room museum in the town, whose population had grown to one hundred thousand. Not only was the return of the Lydian hoard a source of undeniable pride in Usak but it also made restitution a popular cause in neighboring communities that once were centers of the ancient world. Even the looters came to regret their actions. On a visit to Usak in the late 1990s, Acar took three of the confessed grave robbers to the museum. “They were crying and said, ‘How stupid were we. We were idiots,’ ” he recalled with pride. “We created a consciousness.”
But that consciousness didn’t translate into broad viewership of the hoard. In 2006 the top culture official in Usak reported that in the previous five years, only 769 people had visited the museum. That may not be so terribly surprising, since only about 17,000 tourists had visited the region during that time, he said. Back in New York, the Met was unimpressed. “Those who’ve visited those treasures in Turkey is roughly equal to one hour’s worth of visitors at the Met,” Harold Holzer, the museum’s spokesman, remarked dryly.
That was bad enough, but the news soon turned dire. In April 2006 the newspaper Milliyet published another scoop on its front page: the masterpiece of the Lydian hoard, the golden hippocampus—the artifact that now stood as the symbol of Usak, its image published every day on the front page of the local newspaper—was a fake. The real hippocampus had been stolen from the Usak museum and replaced with a counterfeit.
How could such a thing happen? The police examined the hippocampus on display; it was indeed a fake. The original weighed 14.3 grams. The one in the museum was 23.5 grams.
But the bigger bombshell did not drop for several more weeks, when the Culture Ministry announced that the director of the museum, Kazim Akbiyikoglu—the man who had worked diligently for the return of the hoard to Usak, who had gathered evidence and gone to the United States and examined the hoard—was suspected in the theft.
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Comments (4)
I revisited this page because I am going to Turkey this summer and I would like to see the Lydian Hoard, or what remains of it. So far I have found that it is nearly impossible to get to Usak. If an organized tour goes there I have failed to find it. Google maps indicate that it would take at least six hours to get from Kusadasi to Usak via auto. The Lydian Hoard is located where it can only be seen by the most adventurous travelers. Culturally New Yorkers are as closely related to the Lydians as the Turks. The Turks have located this treasure at a location where no one can view it. Is this really in the interest of history or culture.
Posted by N. R. Lerner on November 24,2009 | 05:26 PM
I am shocked to read such racist and ignorant comments on a site such as this. The citizens of modern day Turkey are a blend of all the peoples who have been there throughout the many thousands of years the land has been there. They are citizens of Turkey, thus they are Turks.
Posted by C Lopez on January 1,2009 | 02:25 PM
The argument by N.R. is hollow and to some extent racist. Yes inded some of the Turks and the original Ottoman ruling class came from Central Asia but they mixed with all the Anotolian People and cultures, in the Anatolian melting pot, fueled by the Islamic Religion and the Ottoman Rule. Today's people living there are inheritors of all that is there. This argument sounds like excluding the Norman's from the English Culture becase they arrived there in 1066 (The first Turkish ruling dynasty Seljucks arrived Anatolia in 1071.
As for the Lydian Treasures, the burglary that occured there is aginst the International law and the UN convention. These people are thieves. It is as simple as that.
Posted by Demir Karsan on December 9,2008 | 12:24 PM
1. Present day Turks have no historical relationship with the ancient Lydians. Turks are descendants of people from Central Asia. Culturally they have no greater relationshp with the Lydian people than New Yorkers. It is not their history that was being stolen. 2. The treasure that was found in the ground at best belongs to the owners of that ground. If the people of Usak were allowed to hire archeologists to excavate the tumuli in the vicinity of Usak and then to sell the artifacts found, the world would know much more about the Lydian culture, the artifacts would be available to more people, and they would be better protected. 3. Artifacts that are over 2000 years old are part of every one's history, not the exclusive cultural property of those who reside where the artifacts are found.
Posted by N. R. Lerner on December 1,2008 | 05:42 PM
D.B. has obviously never visited Turkey, a country where Moslems are the overwhelming majority, and which is replete with beautifully protected spiritual sites from early Christianity as well as synogogues and very early religious sites from other trditions. There is a beautifully protected place that is believed to be the home Mary was brought to by St. John after the crucifiction and the place where she died. Christians have a long history of destroying the spiritual structures of other traditions. Greek temples that were converted into churches were spared in places like Agrigento in Italy. The magnificent mosque in Cordoba, Spain survived because it was converted into a cathedral. It did suffer major reconstruction to accomodate the church's needs. I do believe the United States has quite a history of destroying the "pagan" spiritual places of Native Americans. posted by BGS on 11/25 at 11:30
Posted by Bonney Schaub on November 25,2008 | 11:39 AM