Germany To Return Benin Bronzes Looted During Colonial Era

Germany is returning hundreds of Benin Bronzes that were mostly looted from West Africa by a British colonial expedition and subsequently sold to collections around the world, including German museums.

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Germany is returning hundreds of Benin Bronzes that were mostly looted from West Africa by a British colonial expedition and subsequently sold to collections around the world, including German museums.

Foreign Minister Heiko Maas called a move a “turning point in dealing with colonial history and welcomed a deal reached with museums and authorities in Nigeria to work on a restitution plan.

Germany’s minister for culture, Monika Gruetters, said the Benin Bronzes were a key test for the way the country deals with its colonial past and confronting historic and moral responsibility.

Gruetters said the goal is to contribute to “understanding and reconciliation” with the descendants of those whose cultural treasures were stolen in colonial times adding that the first returns are planned for next year.

A historian Juergen Zimmerer, professor of global history at the University of Hamburg, has welcomed the plans, but said they don’t go far enough as there is no precise time plan nor an unconditional commitment to restitute all looted artifacts.

He also noted it’s not yet clear how many objects will be returned, or whether there will be any recognition of the efforts by civil society groups that had called for the restitution.

A British colonial expedition looted vast numbers of treasures from the royal palace of the Kingdom of Benin in 1897, including numerous bas-reliefs and sculptures.

While hundreds of artifacts ended up in the British Museum, hundreds were also sold to other collections such as the Ethnological Museum in Berlin, which has one of the world’s largest collection of historical objects from the Kingdom of Benin.


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