Difference between revisions of "Elgin Marbles" - New World Encyclopedia

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The '''Elgin Marbles''' ([[International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA]]: /{{IPA|'ɛl gən}}/), also known as the '''Parthenon Marbles''' or '''Parthenon Sculptures''', are a large collection of [[marble]] [[sculpture]]s removed from [[Athens]] to [[United Kingdom|Britain]] in 1806 by [[Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin|Lord Elgin]], ambassador to the [[Ottoman Empire]] from 1799 to 1803. Taking advantage of Ottoman occupation over [[Greece]], he obtained a ''[[firman]]'' for their removal from the [[Parthenon]] from the Ottoman [[Sultan]]. The sculptures were deposited in the [[British Museum]], [[London]] in 1816, and in 1936 were placed into the purpose-built Duveen Gallery.
 
The '''Elgin Marbles''' ([[International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA]]: /{{IPA|'ɛl gən}}/), also known as the '''Parthenon Marbles''' or '''Parthenon Sculptures''', are a large collection of [[marble]] [[sculpture]]s removed from [[Athens]] to [[United Kingdom|Britain]] in 1806 by [[Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin|Lord Elgin]], ambassador to the [[Ottoman Empire]] from 1799 to 1803. Taking advantage of Ottoman occupation over [[Greece]], he obtained a ''[[firman]]'' for their removal from the [[Parthenon]] from the Ottoman [[Sultan]]. The sculptures were deposited in the [[British Museum]], [[London]] in 1816, and in 1936 were placed into the purpose-built Duveen Gallery.
 +
 +
Ever since the extradition of these Elgin marbles from the [[Parthenon]], international debate, controversy, and outrage has surrounded the friezes, about how the antiquities had been "defaced by British hands." It is ambiguous about whether Lord Elgin was legally entitled to these art pieces, as he obtained them from the Turks who were then in charge of Athens' permission to control the Parthenon at the time, and the only surviving terms are in Italian, and continue to be disputed to this day.
  
 
==Acquisition==
 
==Acquisition==
During the first ten years of the nineteenth century, [[Lord Thomas Elgin]] (British Ambassador to [[Constantinople]] 1799-1803) removed entire boatloads of ancient [[sculpture]] from [[Athens]]. The pride of this collection was a huge quantity of fifth century B.C.E. sculpture stolen from the [[Parthenon]], the temple to the goddess [[Athena]], which stood atop the [[Acropolis]].
+
During the first ten years of the nineteenth century, [[Lord Thomas Elgin]] (British Ambassador to [[Constantinople]] 1799-1803) removed entire boatloads of ancient [[sculpture]] from [[Athens]]. The pride of this collection was a huge quantity of fifth century B.C.E. sculpture from the [[Parthenon]], the temple to the goddess [[Athena]], which stood atop the [[Acropolis]]. These have come to be known as the '''Elgin marbles'''.
 
 
Ever since the extradition of these '''Elgin marbles''' from the Parthenon, international debate, controversy, and outrage has surrounded the friezes, about how the antiquities had been "defaced by British hands." It is ambiguous about whether Lord Elgin was legally entitled to these art pieces, as he obtained them from the Turks who were then in charge of Athens' permission to control the Parthenon at the time, and the only surviving terms are in Italian, and continue to be disputed to this day.
 
 
 
==Description==
 
[[Image:Elgin Marbles east pediment.jpg|thumb|250 px|The left hand group of surviving figures from the East Pediment of the Parthenon, exhibited as part of the Elgin Marbles in the British Museum.]]
 
The Elgin Marbles include some of the statuary from the [[pediment]]s, the [[Metope (architecture)|metope]] panels depicting battles between the [[Lapith]]s and the [[Centaur]]s, as well as the [[Parthenon]] [[Frieze]] which decorated the horizontal course set above the interior architrave of the temple. As such, they represent more than half of what now remains of the surviving sculptural decoration of the Parthenon: the Elgin marbles and frieze extend to about one kilometer when laid out flat, 15 out of 92 metopes; 17 partial figures from the pediments, as well as other pieces of [[architecture]].
 
 
 
Elgin's acquisitions also included objects from other buildings on the [[Acropolis of Athens|Athenian Acropolis]]: the [[Erechtheion]], reduced to ruin during the [[Greek War of Independence]] (1821–1833); the [[Propylaia]], and the [[Temple of Athena Nike]]. Lord Elgin took half of the marbles from the Parthenon and wax casts were produced from the remaining ones. At present, about two-thirds of the frieze is in [[London]] at the [[British Museum]] and a third remains in [[Athens]]. Much of the Athenian material is not on display, and there are fragments in nine other international [[museum]]s.  
 
  
==Interpretation of the frieze==
 
Considerable debate surrounds the meaning of the frieze but most agree that it depicts the [[Panathenaic Games|Panathenaic]] procession that paraded from [[Eleusinian Mysteries|Eleusis]] to [[Athens]] every four years. The procession on the frieze culminates at the east end of the [[Parthenon]] in a depiction of the [[Greek gods]] who are seated mainly on stools, either side of temple servants in their midst. This section of the frieze is under-appreciated as it has been split between [[London]] and [[Athens]]. A doorway in the [[British Museum]] marks the absence of the relevant section of frieze. An almost complete copy of this section of the frieze is displayed and open to the public at [[Hammerwood Park]] near [[East Grinstead]] in [[Sussex]].
 
[[image:ac-marbles.jpg|thumb|250px|Metope from the Elgin marbles depicting a Centaur and a Lapith fighting.]]
 
 
==Criticism by Elgin's contemporaries==
 
==Criticism by Elgin's contemporaries==
When the marbles were shipped to Britain, there was great criticism of Lord Elgin (who had spent a fortune on the project) but also much admiration of the sculptures. [[Lord Byron]] strongly objected to their removal from [[Greece]]:
+
When the marbles were shipped to [[Britain]], there was great criticism of Lord Elgin (who had spent a fortune on the project) but also much admiration of the [[sculpture]]s. [[Lord Byron]] strongly objected to their removal from [[Greece]]:
 
:''Dull is the eye that will not weep to see''
 
:''Dull is the eye that will not weep to see''
 
:''Thy walls defaced, thy mouldering shrines removed''
 
:''Thy walls defaced, thy mouldering shrines removed''
Line 32: Line 23:
 
:::—"Childe Harold's Pilgrimage"
 
:::—"Childe Harold's Pilgrimage"
  
Byron was not the only Englishman to protest the removal at the time:
+
Byron was not the only Englishman to protest the removal at the time, Sir [[John Newport]] announced:
:"The Honourable Lord has taken advantage of the most unjustifiable means and has committed the most flagrant pillages. It was, it seems, fatal that a representative of our country loot those objects that the Turks and other barbarians had considered sacred,"
+
<blockquote>The Honourable Lord has taken advantage of the most unjustifiable means and has committed the most flagrant pillages. It was, it seems, fatal that a representative of our country loot those objects that the Turks and other barbarians had considered sacred.</blockquote>
said Sir [[John Newport]].
+
 
  
 
A contemporary MP [[Thomas Hughes]], an eye witness, later wrote:  
 
A contemporary MP [[Thomas Hughes]], an eye witness, later wrote:  
:"The abduction of small parts of the Parthenon, of a value relatively small but which previously contributed to the solidity of the building, left that glorious edifice exposed to premature ruin and degradation. The abduction dislodged from their original positions, wherefrom they precisely drew their interest and beauty, many pieces which are altogether unnecessary to the country that now owns them."
+
<blockquote>The abduction of small parts of the Parthenon, of a value relatively small but which previously contributed to the solidity of the building, left that glorious edifice exposed to premature ruin and degradation. The abduction dislodged from their original positions, wherefrom they precisely drew their interest and beauty, many pieces which are altogether unnecessary to the country that now owns them.</blockquote>
  
 
[[John Keats]] was one of those who saw them privately exhibited in London, hence his two [[sonnet]]s about the marbles. Some scholars, notably [[Richard Payne Knight]], insisted that the marbles dated from the period of the [[Roman Empire]], but most accepted that they were authentic works from the studio of [[Phidias]], the most famous ancient Greek sculptor. They were eventually purchased by Parliament for the nation in 1816 for £35,000 and deposited in the [[British Museum]], where they were displayed in the Elgin Saloon (constructed in 1832), until the Duveen Gallery was completed in 1939.
 
[[John Keats]] was one of those who saw them privately exhibited in London, hence his two [[sonnet]]s about the marbles. Some scholars, notably [[Richard Payne Knight]], insisted that the marbles dated from the period of the [[Roman Empire]], but most accepted that they were authentic works from the studio of [[Phidias]], the most famous ancient Greek sculptor. They were eventually purchased by Parliament for the nation in 1816 for £35,000 and deposited in the [[British Museum]], where they were displayed in the Elgin Saloon (constructed in 1832), until the Duveen Gallery was completed in 1939.
 
[[Image:Parthenon_pediment_statues.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Statuary from the east [[pediment]].]]
 
[[Image:Parthenon_pediment_statues.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Statuary from the east [[pediment]].]]
 +
 +
==Description==
 +
[[Image:Elgin Marbles east pediment.jpg|thumb|250 px|The left hand group of surviving figures from the East Pediment of the Parthenon, exhibited as part of the Elgin Marbles in the British Museum.]]
 +
The Elgin Marbles include some of the statuary from the [[pediment]]s, the [[Metope (architecture)|metope]] panels depicting battles between the [[Lapith]]s and the [[Centaur]]s, as well as the [[Parthenon]] [[Frieze]] which decorated the horizontal course set above the interior architrave of the temple. As such, they represent more than half of what now remains of the surviving sculptural decoration of the Parthenon: the Elgin marbles and frieze extend to about one kilometer when laid out flat, 15 out of 92 metopes; 17 partial figures from the pediments, as well as other pieces of [[architecture]].
 +
 +
Elgin's acquisitions also included objects from other buildings on the [[Acropolis of Athens|Athenian Acropolis]]: the [[Erechtheion]], reduced to ruin during the [[Greek War of Independence]] (1821–1833); the [[Propylaia]], and the [[Temple of Athena Nike]]. Lord Elgin took half of the marbles from the Parthenon and wax casts were produced from the remaining ones. At present, about two-thirds of the frieze is in [[London]] at the [[British Museum]] and a third remains in [[Athens]]. Much of the Athenian material is not on display, and there are fragments in nine other international [[museum]]s.
 +
 +
==Interpretation of the frieze==
 +
Considerable debate surrounds the meaning of the frieze but most agree that it depicts the [[Panathenaic Games|Panathenaic]] procession that paraded from [[Eleusinian Mysteries|Eleusis]] to [[Athens]] every four years. The procession on the frieze culminates at the east end of the [[Parthenon]] in a depiction of the [[Greek gods]] who are seated mainly on stools, either side of temple servants in their midst. This section of the frieze is under-appreciated as it has been split between [[London]] and [[Athens]]. A doorway in the [[British Museum]] marks the absence of the relevant section of frieze. An almost complete copy of this section of the frieze is displayed and open to the public at [[Hammerwood Park]] near [[East Grinstead]] in [[Sussex]].
 +
[[image:ac-marbles.jpg|thumb|250px|Metope from the Elgin marbles depicting a Centaur and a Lapith fighting.]]
 +
 
==Damage to the Marbles==
 
==Damage to the Marbles==
 
To facilitate transport, the column capital of the [[Parthenon]] and many metopes and slabs were sawn and sliced into smaller sections. One shipload of marbles on board the British brig ''Mentor'' was caught in a storm off [[Cape Matapan]] and sank near [[Kythera]], but was salvaged at the Earl's personal expense; it took two years to bring them to the surface.<ref name="TheParthenon">{{cite web | url=http://www.museum-security.org/The%20Parthenon%20and%20the%20Elgin%20Marbles.htm | title=The Parthenon and the Elgin Marbles | author=Vranopoulos, Epaminondas}} Retrieved September 23, 2007.</ref>
 
To facilitate transport, the column capital of the [[Parthenon]] and many metopes and slabs were sawn and sliced into smaller sections. One shipload of marbles on board the British brig ''Mentor'' was caught in a storm off [[Cape Matapan]] and sank near [[Kythera]], but was salvaged at the Earl's personal expense; it took two years to bring them to the surface.<ref name="TheParthenon">{{cite web | url=http://www.museum-security.org/The%20Parthenon%20and%20the%20Elgin%20Marbles.htm | title=The Parthenon and the Elgin Marbles | author=Vranopoulos, Epaminondas}} Retrieved September 23, 2007.</ref>
  
 
While the artifacts were held in London, unlike those remaining on the Parthenon, have been saved from the hazards of [[pollution]], neglect, and [[war]], they have also been irrevocably damaged by the unauthorized "cleaning" methods employed by British Museum staff in the 1930s, who were dismissed when this was discovered. Acting under the erroneous belief that the marbles were originally bright white, the marbles were cleaned with [[copper]] tools and caustics, causing serious damage and altering the marbles' coloring. (The Pentelicon marble on which the carvings were made naturally acquires a tan color similar to [[honey]] when exposed to air.) In addition, the process scraped away all traces of surface coloring that the marbles originally held, but more regrettably, the detailed tone of many carvings were lost forever. The British Museum held an internal inquiry and the officers responsible ceased museum employment. However, the extent of any possible damage soon became exaggerated in heated controversy.<ref>[http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/explore/highlights/article_index/c/the_cleaning_of_the_parthenon.aspx British Museum article] and Ian Jenkins, "[http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/research/publications/online_publications/parthenon_sculptures.aspx Cleaning and Controversy]," 2001 Retrieved September 23, 2007.</ref>
 
While the artifacts were held in London, unlike those remaining on the Parthenon, have been saved from the hazards of [[pollution]], neglect, and [[war]], they have also been irrevocably damaged by the unauthorized "cleaning" methods employed by British Museum staff in the 1930s, who were dismissed when this was discovered. Acting under the erroneous belief that the marbles were originally bright white, the marbles were cleaned with [[copper]] tools and caustics, causing serious damage and altering the marbles' coloring. (The Pentelicon marble on which the carvings were made naturally acquires a tan color similar to [[honey]] when exposed to air.) In addition, the process scraped away all traces of surface coloring that the marbles originally held, but more regrettably, the detailed tone of many carvings were lost forever. The British Museum held an internal inquiry and the officers responsible ceased museum employment. However, the extent of any possible damage soon became exaggerated in heated controversy.<ref>[http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/explore/highlights/article_index/c/the_cleaning_of_the_parthenon.aspx British Museum article] and Ian Jenkins, "[http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/research/publications/online_publications/parthenon_sculptures.aspx Cleaning and Controversy]," 2001 Retrieved September 23, 2007.</ref>
 
According to a list of facts revealed by appeals to the [[UK]] [[Freedom of Information Act]], the Elgin Marbles were damaged by two schoolboys fighting in the British Museum in 1961. One of the boys fell and knocked off part of a centaur's leg.<ref name="Elgin Marbles were damaged by two schoolboys fighting">{{Citation | newspaper = Times Online | date = 2007-03-5 | url =http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/global/article1471409.ece | title=59 things that would have stayed secret }} Retrieved September 23, 2007.</ref>
 
  
 
[[Image:Elgin_marbles_frieze.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Section of a frieze from the Elgin Marbles.]]
 
[[Image:Elgin_marbles_frieze.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Section of a frieze from the Elgin Marbles.]]
Line 58: Line 58:
  
 
==Other displaced Parthenon art==
 
==Other displaced Parthenon art==
Lord Elgin was neither the first, nor the last, to disperse elements of the marbles from their original location. The remainder of the surviving sculptures that are not in museums or storerooms in Athens are held in museums in various locations across Europe. The British Museum also holds additional fragments from the Parthenon sculptures acquired from various collections that have no connection with Lord Elgin.
+
Lord Elgin was neither the first, nor the last, to disperse elements of the marbles from their original location. The remainder of the surviving sculptures that are not in [[museum]]s or storerooms in [[Athens]] are held in museums in various locations across Europe. The [[British Museum]] also holds additional fragments from the [[Parthenon]] sculptures acquired from various collections that have no connection with Lord Elgin.
  
 
Material from the Parthenon was dispersed both before and after Elgin's activities. The British Museum holds approximately half of the surviving sculptures. The remainder is divided among the following locations:  
 
Material from the Parthenon was dispersed both before and after Elgin's activities. The British Museum holds approximately half of the surviving sculptures. The remainder is divided among the following locations:  
  
 
* '''Athens:'''
 
* '''Athens:'''
:* Extensive remains of the metopes (especially east, north and west), frieze (especially west) and pediments
+
** Extensive remains of the metopes (especially east, north and west), frieze (especially west) and pediments
:* Less than 50 percent is on public display and some is still on the building.  
+
** Less than 50 percent is on public display and some is still on the building.  
 
* [[Louvre]], [[Paris]]:
 
* [[Louvre]], [[Paris]]:
:* One frieze slab
+
** One frieze slab
:* One metope
+
** One metope
:* Fragments of the frieze and metopes
+
** Fragments of the frieze and metopes
:* A head from the pediments  
+
** A head from the pediments  
 
* [[National Museum of Denmark]], [[Copenhagen]]:
 
* [[National Museum of Denmark]], [[Copenhagen]]:
:* Two heads from a metope in the British Museum  
+
** Two heads from a metope in the British Museum  
 
* [[University of Würzburg]], [[Würzburg]]:
 
* [[University of Würzburg]], [[Würzburg]]:
:* Head from a metope in the British Museum  
+
** Head from a metope in the British Museum  
 
* [[Museo Salinas]], [[Palermo]]:
 
* [[Museo Salinas]], [[Palermo]]:
:* Fragment of frieze
+
** Fragment of frieze
 
* [[Vatican Museums]]:
 
* [[Vatican Museums]]:
:* Fragments of metopes, frieze and pediments  
+
** Fragments of metopes, frieze and pediments  
 
* [[Kunsthistorisches Museum]], [[Vienna]]:
 
* [[Kunsthistorisches Museum]], [[Vienna]]:
:* Three fragments of frieze
+
** Three fragments of frieze
 
* [[Glyptothek]], [[Munich]]:
 
* [[Glyptothek]], [[Munich]]:
:* Fragments of metopes and frieze; not on display
+
** Fragments of metopes and frieze; not on display
  
The collection held in the British Museum includes the following material from the Acropolis:  
+
The collection held in the [[British Museum]] includes the following material from the [[Acropolis]]:  
  
* Parthenon: 247 ft of the original 524 ft of frieze
+
* [[Parthenon]]: 247 ft of the original 524 ft of frieze
:* 15 of the 92 metopes
+
** 15 of the 92 metopes
:* 17 pedimental figures; various pieces of architecture   
+
** 17 pedimental figures; various pieces of architecture   
 
* Erechtheion: a [[Caryatid]], a column and other architectural members  
 
* Erechtheion: a [[Caryatid]], a column and other architectural members  
 
* Propylaia: Architectural members  
 
* Propylaia: Architectural members  

Revision as of 05:04, 25 September 2007


General view of the room displaying the Elgin Marbles.

The Elgin Marbles (IPA: /'ɛl gən/), also known as the Parthenon Marbles or Parthenon Sculptures, are a large collection of marble sculptures removed from Athens to Britain in 1806 by Lord Elgin, ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1799 to 1803. Taking advantage of Ottoman occupation over Greece, he obtained a firman for their removal from the Parthenon from the Ottoman Sultan. The sculptures were deposited in the British Museum, London in 1816, and in 1936 were placed into the purpose-built Duveen Gallery.

Ever since the extradition of these Elgin marbles from the Parthenon, international debate, controversy, and outrage has surrounded the friezes, about how the antiquities had been "defaced by British hands." It is ambiguous about whether Lord Elgin was legally entitled to these art pieces, as he obtained them from the Turks who were then in charge of Athens' permission to control the Parthenon at the time, and the only surviving terms are in Italian, and continue to be disputed to this day.

Acquisition

During the first ten years of the nineteenth century, Lord Thomas Elgin (British Ambassador to Constantinople 1799-1803) removed entire boatloads of ancient sculpture from Athens. The pride of this collection was a huge quantity of fifth century B.C.E. sculpture from the Parthenon, the temple to the goddess Athena, which stood atop the Acropolis. These have come to be known as the Elgin marbles.

Criticism by Elgin's contemporaries

When the marbles were shipped to Britain, there was great criticism of Lord Elgin (who had spent a fortune on the project) but also much admiration of the sculptures. Lord Byron strongly objected to their removal from Greece:

Dull is the eye that will not weep to see
Thy walls defaced, thy mouldering shrines removed
By British hands, which it had best behoved
To guard those relics ne’er to be restored.
Curst be the hour when from their isle they roved,
And once again thy hapless bosom gored,
And snatch'd thy shrinking gods to northern climes abhorred!
—"Childe Harold's Pilgrimage"

Byron was not the only Englishman to protest the removal at the time, Sir John Newport announced:

The Honourable Lord has taken advantage of the most unjustifiable means and has committed the most flagrant pillages. It was, it seems, fatal that a representative of our country loot those objects that the Turks and other barbarians had considered sacred.


A contemporary MP Thomas Hughes, an eye witness, later wrote:

The abduction of small parts of the Parthenon, of a value relatively small but which previously contributed to the solidity of the building, left that glorious edifice exposed to premature ruin and degradation. The abduction dislodged from their original positions, wherefrom they precisely drew their interest and beauty, many pieces which are altogether unnecessary to the country that now owns them.

John Keats was one of those who saw them privately exhibited in London, hence his two sonnets about the marbles. Some scholars, notably Richard Payne Knight, insisted that the marbles dated from the period of the Roman Empire, but most accepted that they were authentic works from the studio of Phidias, the most famous ancient Greek sculptor. They were eventually purchased by Parliament for the nation in 1816 for £35,000 and deposited in the British Museum, where they were displayed in the Elgin Saloon (constructed in 1832), until the Duveen Gallery was completed in 1939.

Statuary from the east pediment.

Description

The left hand group of surviving figures from the East Pediment of the Parthenon, exhibited as part of the Elgin Marbles in the British Museum.

The Elgin Marbles include some of the statuary from the pediments, the metope panels depicting battles between the Lapiths and the Centaurs, as well as the Parthenon Frieze which decorated the horizontal course set above the interior architrave of the temple. As such, they represent more than half of what now remains of the surviving sculptural decoration of the Parthenon: the Elgin marbles and frieze extend to about one kilometer when laid out flat, 15 out of 92 metopes; 17 partial figures from the pediments, as well as other pieces of architecture.

Elgin's acquisitions also included objects from other buildings on the Athenian Acropolis: the Erechtheion, reduced to ruin during the Greek War of Independence (1821–1833); the Propylaia, and the Temple of Athena Nike. Lord Elgin took half of the marbles from the Parthenon and wax casts were produced from the remaining ones. At present, about two-thirds of the frieze is in London at the British Museum and a third remains in Athens. Much of the Athenian material is not on display, and there are fragments in nine other international museums.

Interpretation of the frieze

Considerable debate surrounds the meaning of the frieze but most agree that it depicts the Panathenaic procession that paraded from Eleusis to Athens every four years. The procession on the frieze culminates at the east end of the Parthenon in a depiction of the Greek gods who are seated mainly on stools, either side of temple servants in their midst. This section of the frieze is under-appreciated as it has been split between London and Athens. A doorway in the British Museum marks the absence of the relevant section of frieze. An almost complete copy of this section of the frieze is displayed and open to the public at Hammerwood Park near East Grinstead in Sussex.

Metope from the Elgin marbles depicting a Centaur and a Lapith fighting.

Damage to the Marbles

To facilitate transport, the column capital of the Parthenon and many metopes and slabs were sawn and sliced into smaller sections. One shipload of marbles on board the British brig Mentor was caught in a storm off Cape Matapan and sank near Kythera, but was salvaged at the Earl's personal expense; it took two years to bring them to the surface.[1]

While the artifacts were held in London, unlike those remaining on the Parthenon, have been saved from the hazards of pollution, neglect, and war, they have also been irrevocably damaged by the unauthorized "cleaning" methods employed by British Museum staff in the 1930s, who were dismissed when this was discovered. Acting under the erroneous belief that the marbles were originally bright white, the marbles were cleaned with copper tools and caustics, causing serious damage and altering the marbles' coloring. (The Pentelicon marble on which the carvings were made naturally acquires a tan color similar to honey when exposed to air.) In addition, the process scraped away all traces of surface coloring that the marbles originally held, but more regrettably, the detailed tone of many carvings were lost forever. The British Museum held an internal inquiry and the officers responsible ceased museum employment. However, the extent of any possible damage soon became exaggerated in heated controversy.[2]

Section of a frieze from the Elgin Marbles.

The Greek claim to the Marbles

The Greek government has claimed that the marbles should be returned to Athens on moral grounds, although it is no longer feasible or advisable to reposition them onto the Parthenon. As part of the campaign, it is building the New Acropolis Museum, designed by the Swiss-American architect Bernard Tschumi, designed to hold the Parthenon sculptures arranged in the same way as they would have been on the Parthenon. It is intended to leave the spaces for the Elgin Marbles empty, rather than using casts in these positions, as a reminder to visitors of the fact that parts are held in other museums. The new museum plan also attracted controversy; the construction site contains late Roman and early Christian archaeology, including an unusual seventh century Byzantine bath house and other finds from Late Antiquity.

The British Museum position

Parthenon Selene Horse.

A range of slightly different points have been put by British Museum spokespersons over the years in defense of retention of the Elgin Marbles within the museum. The main points include the maintenance of a single worldwide-oriented cultural collection, all viewable in one location, thereby serving as a world heritage center; the saving of the marbles from what would have been, or would be, pollution and other damage if relocated back to Athens; and a legal position that the museum is banned by charter from returning any part of its collection.[3] The latter was tested in the British High Court in May 2005 in relation to Nazi-looted Old Master artworks held at the museum; it was ruled that these could not be returned.[4] The judge, Sir Andrew Morritt, ruled that the British Museum Act – which protects the collections for posterity – cannot be overridden by a "moral obligation" to return works known to have been plundered. It has been argued however, that connections between the legal ruling and the Elgin Marbles were more tenuous than implied by the Attorney General.[5]

Other displaced Parthenon art

Lord Elgin was neither the first, nor the last, to disperse elements of the marbles from their original location. The remainder of the surviving sculptures that are not in museums or storerooms in Athens are held in museums in various locations across Europe. The British Museum also holds additional fragments from the Parthenon sculptures acquired from various collections that have no connection with Lord Elgin.

Material from the Parthenon was dispersed both before and after Elgin's activities. The British Museum holds approximately half of the surviving sculptures. The remainder is divided among the following locations:

  • Athens:
    • Extensive remains of the metopes (especially east, north and west), frieze (especially west) and pediments
    • Less than 50 percent is on public display and some is still on the building.
  • Louvre, Paris:
    • One frieze slab
    • One metope
    • Fragments of the frieze and metopes
    • A head from the pediments
  • National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen:
    • Two heads from a metope in the British Museum
  • University of Würzburg, Würzburg:
    • Head from a metope in the British Museum
  • Museo Salinas, Palermo:
    • Fragment of frieze
  • Vatican Museums:
    • Fragments of metopes, frieze and pediments
  • Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna:
    • Three fragments of frieze
  • Glyptothek, Munich:
    • Fragments of metopes and frieze; not on display

The collection held in the British Museum includes the following material from the Acropolis:

  • Parthenon: 247 ft of the original 524 ft of frieze
    • 15 of the 92 metopes
    • 17 pedimental figures; various pieces of architecture
  • Erechtheion: a Caryatid, a column and other architectural members
  • Propylaia: Architectural members
  • Temple of Athena Nike: 4 slabs of the frieze and architectural members

Notes

  1. Vranopoulos, Epaminondas. The Parthenon and the Elgin Marbles. Retrieved September 23, 2007.
  2. British Museum article and Ian Jenkins, "Cleaning and Controversy," 2001 Retrieved September 23, 2007.
  3. British Museum press release on the Elgin Marbles Retrieved September 23, 2007.
  4. Guardian article on legal ruling affecting the marbles' return policy, May 27, 2005 Retrieved September 23, 2007.
  5. Article on the relevance of the Feldmann paintings judgment to the Elgin Marbles. Retrieved September 23, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Mary Beard, The Parthenon (Profile Books, 2004) ISBN 978-1861973016
  • Christopher Hitchens, The Elgin Marbles: Should they be returned to Greece? (with essays by Robert Browning and Graham Binns) (Verso, March 1998)
  • Ian Jenkins, The Parthenon Frieze (British Museum Press, 2002)
  • Dorothy King, The Elgin Marbles (Hutchinson, January 2006)
  • William St. Clair, Lord Elgin and the Marbles (Oxford University Press, 1998)

External links


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