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Berlin agrees with Nigeria on Benin bronzes

2022-06-28T16:32:53.224Z


Berlin agrees with Nigeria on Benin bronzes Created: 06/28/2022Updated: 06/28/2022 18:22 Benin bronzes with their inventory labels are in a depot in the Rautenstrauch-Joest Museum. © Marius Becker/dpa/archive image For a long time, museums have been reluctant to deal with their art objects from the colonial past. The debate about the Benin bronzes has brought new impetus. Now there are concrete


Berlin agrees with Nigeria on Benin bronzes

Created: 06/28/2022Updated: 06/28/2022 18:22

Benin bronzes with their inventory labels are in a depot in the Rautenstrauch-Joest Museum.

© Marius Becker/dpa/archive image

For a long time, museums have been reluctant to deal with their art objects from the colonial past.

The debate about the Benin bronzes has brought new impetus.

Now there are concrete agreements.

Berlin - Germany and Nigeria have reached an agreement on how to deal with the Benin bronzes in German museums, which are considered colonial loot.

According to information from the German Press Agency, Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock and Minister of State for Culture Claudia Roth (both Greens) will sign a declaration of intent with their Nigerian counterparts in Berlin on Friday, which will pave the way for the transfer of ownership of the valuable art objects.

The signing takes place at the Federal Foreign Office.

Minister of Culture Lai Mohammed and Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Zubairo Dada are said to represent the Nigerian side.

Two bronzes are to be handed over immediately afterwards.

According to dpa information, the pieces come from Berlin stocks.

Around 1,100 of the ornate bronzes from the palace of what was then the Kingdom of Benin, which today belongs to Nigeria, can be found in around 20 German museums.

Most of the objects come from the British looting of 1897.

Last year, representatives from the federal government, Nigeria and museums announced the retransfer of ownership rights.

The Linden Museum in Stuttgart, the Museum am Rothenbaum (Hamburg), the Rautenstrauch-Joest Museum (Cologne), the Ethnological Museum in Dresden/Leipzig and the Ethnological Museum in Berlin all have the most extensive collections.

So far, these five houses are involved in the planned transfer of ownership.

So far, we have discussed with the partners in Nigeria which and how many objects should not only be transferred, but also returned and what can remain in Germany - then as a loan.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-06-28

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