Ancient Peruvian Artwork Found in London Aug 17, 12:25

IGBT

Lifer
Jul 16, 2001
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Text


LONDON (AP) - Fashioned from a sheet of embossed gold and centuries old, a prized headdress renowned as Peru's equivalent of the "Mona Lisa" has been seized by police.

With a feline face at its center and eight curving tentacles, the ancient artifact - which collectors claim could be among Peru's most valuable treasures and worth close to $2 million - has been kept from public view for as along as a decade. Police said Thursday that it was found hidden in a dusty cabinet of a London law firm.

Specialist art detectives seized the antiquity in a raid on the central London lawyer's office after a lengthy investigation into looted works, the capital's Metropolitan police said.

Officers said the golden headdress was made in the image of an ancient sea god and could date back to around 700 A.D., making it a prized example of artwork by the Mochica civilization that inhabited northern Peru.

Detective Constable Michelle Roycroft said the work had been seized on Monday, and that officers hoped to hand the valuable over to Peruvian authorities at a ceremony at London's Scotland Yard on Aug. 29.

Michel van Rijn, a London-based art dealer, alerted officers to the existence of the piece after he was asked to facilitate its sale and realized it had likely been stolen. Rijn said the artifact was looted from an archaeological dig at a royal tomb in 1988 and later stolen from the office of an art dealer in Peru in 1996.

A London lawyer had been holding the piece for several months for a client and was unaware it was stolen, police said. Officers added that the law firm did not know how the client had acquired the work.

Roycroft said the seizure was hugely significant and that inquiries were ongoing in Britain and Peru to trace similar valuable works, but said British authorities had filed no arrest warrants in the theft of the headdress.

"Without a doubt this is a very important moment in the worldwide war against illicit art and the looting of my country," Walter Alva, of Peru's Royal Tombs of Sipan Museum, said in a statement.
 

Brutuskend

Lifer
Apr 2, 2001
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COOL!

Glad to see South America finally getting back a SMALL portion of the VAST amount of looted art treasures taken from them.

Imagine all that was LOST forever when the Spanish tore through the area and melted down ANYTHING made of precious metal.... :(
 

IGBT

Lifer
Jul 16, 2001
17,976
141
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Originally posted by: Brutuskend
COOL!

Glad to see South America finally getting back a SMALL portion of the VAST amount of looted art treasures taken from them.

Imagine all that was LOST forever when the Spanish tore through the area and melted down ANYTHING made of precious metal.... :(


..and made them stop speaking their native Inca and Indian dialects and forced them to speak spanish.
 

Brutuskend

Lifer
Apr 2, 2001
26,558
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Originally posted by: IGBT
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
COOL!

Glad to see South America finally getting back a SMALL portion of the VAST amount of looted art treasures taken from them.

Imagine all that was LOST forever when the Spanish tore through the area and melted down ANYTHING made of precious metal.... :(


..and made them stop speaking their native Inca and Indian dialects and forced them to speak spanish.

Yup and tore down all their temples and built Christian ones on top of the old sites.

It STILL amazes me that after all of that, Catholicism can STILL have such a hold on the South American people.... :shocked:
 

Alienwho

Diamond Member
Apr 22, 2001
6,766
0
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Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Originally posted by: IGBT
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
COOL!

Glad to see South America finally getting back a SMALL portion of the VAST amount of looted art treasures taken from them.

Imagine all that was LOST forever when the Spanish tore through the area and melted down ANYTHING made of precious metal.... :(


..and made them stop speaking their native Inca and Indian dialects and forced them to speak spanish.
Yup and tore down all their temples and built Christian ones on top of the old sites.

It STILL amazes me that after all of that, Catholicism can STILL have such a hold on the South American people.... :shocked:
By now it is simply their culture, so it's actually easier to stay with it than to change. Pretty amazing stuff.
 

Albatross

Platinum Member
Jul 17, 2001
2,344
8
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Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Originally posted by: albatross
yeah,they should go back to human sacrifices

You mean like burning heretics at the stake?

they were very few despite the anti christian propaganda.
while in south america killing people was religion in itself.
 

Brutuskend

Lifer
Apr 2, 2001
26,558
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Originally posted by: albatross
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Originally posted by: albatross
yeah,they should go back to human sacrifices

You mean like burning heretics at the stake?

they were very few despite the anti Christian propaganda.
while in south america killing people was religion in itself.

The may have killed people as part of their religion, but I doubt they tortured them as the Christians did. And if they DID, I doubt they came up with so many ingenious ways to do so....
 

Albatross

Platinum Member
Jul 17, 2001
2,344
8
81
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Originally posted by: albatross
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Originally posted by: albatross
yeah,they should go back to human sacrifices

You mean like burning heretics at the stake?

they were very few despite the anti Christian propaganda.
while in south america killing people was religion in itself.

The may have killed people as part of their religion, but I doubt they tortured them as the Christians did. And if they DID, I doubt they came up with so many ingenious ways to do so....

well in fact they did torture people in extremly gruesome ways,especially the aztecs.
but christians have many achivements which dwarf any pre-columbian civilization.

 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
101,108
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Not really torture, but sacrificial rituals. They are volunteers mostly, only in desperate times do the sacrifice people captured in wars.