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A Pompeiian-style fresco from Herculaneum titled Young Hercules and the snake on display during a press conference in Rome Andrew Medichini/PA Images
fresco

Ancient fresco depicting Hercules among 60 treasures returned to Italy from US

Last summer, US authorities announced that the fresco and dozens of other trafficked objects would go back to Italy.

A FRESCO DEPICTING Hercules and originally from Herculaneum, a city destroyed along with Pompeii by the 79AD eruption of Mount Vesuvius, is back in Italy, along with 59 other ancient pieces illegally trafficked to the United States.

Last summer, US authorities announced that the fresco and dozens of other trafficked objects, which ended up in private collections in the United States, would go back to Italy.

Among the more precious pieces Italian and US officials displayed to journalists in Rome is a BC kylix, or shallow two-handled drinking vessel, some 2,600 years old.

Also returned is a sculpted marble head, from the 2nd century BC, depicting the goddess Athena.

Italy said the returned works are worth more than $20 million dollars overall.

The fresco, done in the classic style of Pompeiian art, depicts Hercules as a child strangling a snake.

The returned pieces had been sold by art dealers, ended up in private US collections and lacked documentation to prove they could be legally brought abroad from Italy.

Under a 1909 Italian law, archaeological objects excavated in Italy cannot leave the country without permission unless they were taken abroad before the law was made.

Among those at today’s presentation was Manhattan assistant district attorney Matthew Bogdanos, chief of that office’s unit combating illicit trafficking in antiquities.

On this investigation, his office worked jointly with a specialised art squad branch of Italy’s paramilitary Carabinieri.

“For Italian antiquities alone we have executed 75 raids, recovered more than 500 priceless treasures valued at more than $55 million,” Bogdanos said.

Italy has been a pioneer in retrieving illegally exported antiquities from museums and private collections abroad.

The country has been so successful in recovering such ancient artworks and artefacts that it created a museum for them.

The Museum of Rescued Art was inaugurated in June in a cavernous structure that is part of Rome’s ancient Baths of Diocletian.

Italian cultural authorities are deciding whether to assign the latest returned pieces to museums near to where they were believed to have been excavated.

Culture minister Gennaro Sangiuliano told reporters that another possibility is having a special exhibition of the returned pieces.

It is not only Italy that loses pieces of its own history when artefacts are discovered in clandestine excavations and smuggled off to art dealers for profitable sales.

Academic experts, deprived of valuable information about the context of the area where the objects were originally found, lose out on knowledge about past civilisations.

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