Initial batch of looted artefacts arrive in Ghana; slated for Feb. 8 presentation to Otumfuo

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Initial batch of seven artefacts looted during the third Anglo-Asante War of 1874 has arrived in Ghana.

The artefacts, which arrived on a United Airlines flight, are scheduled for a formal presentation to the Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, on Thursday, February 8, 2024.

A delegation of three people, led by Dr. Silvia Forni, Director of the Fowler Museum at the University of California, Los Angeles (where the artefacts were housed for nearly 60 years), will make the official presentation at the commencement durbar commemorating the 150th anniversary of the war at Dwaberem, Manhyia Palace.

Accompanying Dr. Forni are Dr. Rachel Raynor, Director of Registration and Collections, Dr. Erica Jones, Curator of the Africa Department, and Professor Kwesi Ampene, an external affiliate and Chair of the Music Department at Tufts University.

The Fowler Museum initially purchased the returned items from the Wellcome Trust in 1965.

The Wellcome Trust is a prominent charity that manages the Wellcome Collection museum and library in Britain.

The Wellcome Collection honours the illustrious British-American industrialist and art collector, Sir Henry Wellcome.

The restitution of the objects has been the subject of continuous discussions for several years between the Manhyia Palace and the Fowler Museum.

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The objects’ eventual permanent return was made possible by their departure from California, which was authorised by a December CITES permission.

Historian Ivor Agyeman-Duah verified the information, attributing the choice to return to a change in university policy about stolen property. The return of such objects to their original owners is made possible by this amended policy.

Additionally, Mr. Agyeman-Duah disclosed the creation of a brand-new model for cross-cultural cooperation.

The Fowler Museum at UCLA, the Manhyia Palace Museum, and the College of Art and Built Environment at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology will all be involved in this partnership.

As intended by the Asantehene, who doubles as the Chancellor of the University, such an arrangement is a first step in promoting cross-cultural cooperation.

The seven objects, dating back to the period before Asantehene Kofi Karkari in the 1840s, include an ornamental chair of wood, brass, leather, and iron; ten large beads used as bracelets or anklets; strands of seed or bug-shaped beads; gold of an elephant hair, glass, and silver; a royal stool ornament; a royal necklace, and a royal stool ornament.

The seven objects that are being returned date to the 1840s, before Asantehene Kofi Karkari.

They consist of an ornamental chair made of wood, brass, leather, and iron; ten sizable beads worn as an anklet or bracelet; a string of beads shaped like seeds or insects; gold, glass, and silver; an ornament for a royal stool; and a royal necklace.