Germany set to return Benin Bronzes 125 years after looting by British soldiers
Our Reporter
Germany is set to return 440 of Benin Bronzes that were looted 125 years ago by a British colonial expedition and subsequently sold to collections around the world, including German museums, Berlin authorities said on Friday.
Germany’s Foreign Minister Heiko Maas welcomed a deal reached with museums to work on a plan for the restitution of the artifacts together with Nigeria, calling it a “turning point in dealing with our colonial history.”
Culture Minister Monika Gruetters, said the Benin Bronzes were a key test for the way the country deals with its colonial past.
“We are confronting our historic and moral responsibility,” she said.
Gruetters said the goal is to contribute to “understanding and reconciliation” with the descendants of those whose cultural treasures were stolen in colonial times. The first returns are planned for next year, she said.
A British colonial expedition plundered vast numbers of treasures from the royal palace of the Kingdom of Benin in 1897, including numerous bas-reliefs and sculptures. Many of the artifacts ended up in the British Museum, though hundreds were also sold to other collections.
The Ethnological Museum in Berlin has one of the world’s largest collection of historical objects from the Kingdom of Benin, estimated to include about 530 items, including 440 bronzes.
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The University of Aberdeen and Lambeth Palace, the London residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury, are among the British institutions which have so far announced their intention to send back their Benin Bronzes.
The Scottish university claimed that the bronzes had been seized in ‘reprehensible circumstances.’
That decision put pressure on the British Museum, which holds hundreds of the pieces, to follow suit.
Late last year, France approved the restitution of 26 items from the Kingdom of Benin.
Britain’s Acting Consul-General in the Niger Delta, James Phillips had, in December 1896, embarked on an expedition to depose the then Oba of Benin Ovonramwen, because he had “reason to hope that sufficient ivory would be found in the King’s house.”
Phillips,in a letter to Lord Salisbury, the Foreign Secretary , intended to use the funds realized from the ivory to “pay the expenses incurred in removing the King from his stool.”
He was accompanied by a medical officer, two trading agents and about 250 African soldiers masquerading as porters.
Phillips also sent a deceptive message to Ovonramwen about his visit to discuss ‘peace and trade’.
The Oba suggested that the trip be postponed because of an impending national festival but Phillips would not hear of it only for him and his accomplices to run into an ambush laid by Edo warriors.
All perished in the ambush save Captain Alan Maxwell Boisragon, Commandant of the Constabulary of the Niger Coast Protectorate and Ralph Locke, District Commissioner of Warri.
A few days later Britain sent a force of around 1,200 Royal Marines, sailors and troops from the Niger Coast Protectorate Forces led by Rear-Admiral Harry Rawson to sack Benin.
This time the invaders overwhelmed the Benin warriors and destroyed almost everything on their part.
The Oba’s palace was looted and hundreds of priceless artefacts were shipped back to England, hundreds were later sold to other colonial powers throughout Europe and America.