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[News] We want our Marbles back, we want our Marbles back...







Bob!

Coffee Buyer
Jul 5, 2003
11,718
How would we feel if the Greeks had taken Stonehenge and refused to let us have it back?

Didn't the people of Wiltshire get the stones from Wales, perhaps Stonehenge should be given back to the Welsh?
 


Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
53,621
Goldstone
How would we feel if the Greeks had taken Stonehenge and refused to let us have it back?

If we sold it to them, we'd have little complaint.

Should the US return Alaska to Russia?
 


Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
53,621
Goldstone
Didn't the people of Wiltshire get the stones from Wales, perhaps Stonehenge should be given back to the Welsh?

Good point. Some of them are from Scotchland.
 














Sid and the Sharknados

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Sep 4, 2022
5,868
Darlington
I don't think it makes much difference to anything to do with the current situation in all honesty. It was more a reference to your 'squatters' comment, which, whilst highly amusing, also doesn't really have anything to do with the current situation, or the one when the marbles were removed - the Ottoman Empire having been around far longer than anyone could remember at that point.

Having seen the marbles fairly recently I can confirm that they are, in fact, quite dull. I do however think that 'just giving them back', is not an option, this needs to be an equitable transaction between the parties, after all a great deal of money has been spent to purchase and maintain these artefacts, so it is only right that there should be some compensation to secure a permanent return and transfer of ownership.
I don't recall ever writing how long I'd been on holiday for. ???:lolol:

In any case, I'd accept that was a reasonable point if there was some sense after those 300years that the Ottomans were indistinguishable from the Greeks and the rightful inheritors of ancient Greek heritage, but there wasn't. The marbles were removed only a couple of decades before Greek independence.

To be honest, the legality aspect of this doesn't really interest me. Having been to both the Acropolis Museum and the British Museum, I think the former is a much better and more impressive place to keep them. And my understanding is that the idea is that we'd get something/s in exchange for the British Museum to put on display instead, so it's not like we'd just be handing them over for nothing anyway.

Also, it clearly actually matters to the Greeks, whereas I really just don't care about the things and don't particularly see why I should.
 








PeterT

Well-known member
Apr 21, 2017
2,397
Hove
I don't recall ever writing how long I'd been on holiday for. ???:lolol:

In any case, I'd accept that was a reasonable point if there was some sense after those 300years that the Ottomans were indistinguishable from the Greeks and the rightful inheritors of ancient Greek heritage, but there wasn't. The marbles were removed only a couple of decades before Greek independence.

To be honest, the legality aspect of this doesn't really interest me. Having been to both the Acropolis Museum and the British Museum, I think the former is a much better and more impressive place to keep them. And my understanding is that the idea is that we'd get something/s in exchange for the British Museum to put on display instead, so it's not like we'd just be handing them over for nothing anyway.

Also, it clearly actually matters to the Greeks, whereas I really just don't care about the things and don't particularly see why I should.
I think that’s where the negotiations have stalled, and although the full set of Demis Roussos’s stage costumes currently offered in exchange would definitely fill the space, there is an argument to say it’s not really like for like ….
 




Sid and the Sharknados

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Sep 4, 2022
5,868
Darlington
I think that’s where the negotiations have stalled, and although the full set of Demis Roussos’s stage costumes currently offered in exchange would definitely fill the space, there is an argument to say it’s not really like for like ….
Would probably be more interesting to be honest.
I don’t know if we just get to hear about it more in this country because it involves us?
...
We are probably seen as a soft touch these days, which may be true, especially since Brexit which lost us a lot of friends.
I'm pretty sure there's loads of this sort of thing going on involving different countries. I remember reading a couple of years ago that a German museum/government were looking at returning their Benin Bronzes to Nigeria. It's definitely not an issue unique to Britain.
 






dsr-burnley

Well-known member
Aug 15, 2014
2,687
Would probably be more interesting to be honest.

I'm pretty sure there's loads of this sort of thing going on involving different countries. I remember reading a couple of years ago that a German museum/government were looking at returning their Benin Bronzes to Nigeria. It's definitely not an issue unique to Britain.
That's one of the eccentricities of the modern world. That UK which shed blood and cash to stop the slave trade should pay reparations to Africa, while African countries that profited from the slave trade should have those profits returned to them.
 


jackanada

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2011
3,523
Brighton
That's one of the eccentricities of the modern world. That UK which shed blood and cash to stop the slave trade should pay reparations to Africa, while African countries that profited from the slave trade should have those profits returned to them.
I agree Britain should not be paying reparations, though we could perhaps take part of the vast reparations that were still being paid to the estates of British slavers until relatively recently and send that.
 


Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,728
Faversham
I don't recall ever writing how long I'd been on holiday for. ???:lolol:

In any case, I'd accept that was a reasonable point if there was some sense after those 300years that the Ottomans were indistinguishable from the Greeks and the rightful inheritors of ancient Greek heritage, but there wasn't. The marbles were removed only a couple of decades before Greek independence.

To be honest, the legality aspect of this doesn't really interest me. Having been to both the Acropolis Museum and the British Museum, I think the former is a much better and more impressive place to keep them. And my understanding is that the idea is that we'd get something/s in exchange for the British Museum to put on display instead, so it's not like we'd just be handing them over for nothing anyway.

Also, it clearly actually matters to the Greeks, whereas I really just don't care about the things and don't particularly see why I should.
I suspect the main issue here is handing them back would be an affront to the 'no surrender' contingent.

It used to be argued when I was a lad, the Greeks are too stupid to know how to look after them.

Which is ironic given how badly we have f***ed some of them up.
 




Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,728
Faversham
That's one of the eccentricities of the modern world. That UK which shed blood and cash to stop the slave trade should pay reparations to Africa, while African countries that profited from the slave trade should have those profits returned to them.
In your dreams. Please don't float such bollocks as if it is about to happen tomorrow.

Albeit, to miss-quote Basil Fawlty, we did start it (the Africa/America/Bristol slave trade)

That said, William Wilberforce meant we were also the first to get cold feet. Hooray for us.
 


Hugo Rune

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 23, 2012
23,834
Brighton
It’s being reported in the Times that Sir Keir will not let the Government get involved with any decisions the British Museum will be taking about the marbles meaning that they are free to negotiate their return to Greece.

Unlike predecessors such as Sunak and Johnson who recognised the opportunity to inflame the culture war and turn gammon a deeper shade of red, Starmer presumably thinks there are more important things to discuss with the Greek PM. Look out for a frothing Farage asking a question about this at PMQs today (if he is not in the States).
 


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