
Ancient artefacts worth over €2 million to return from New York to Greece and Italy
These included a votive figurine dating from 1300-1200 BCE and a marble funerary relief from the 4th-3rd century BCE. Other treasures being sent back to Greece include a Hellenistic statuette of Atalanta, a battle-scene aryballos (flask) from 600-500 BCE, and a Dionysian kantharos (cup) from the 4th century BCE.
The Greek items recovered by the Manhattan District Attorney's Office are estimated to be worth around $1 million (€953,000), according to Greek newspaper Kathimerini.
'The return of these pieces is the product of a substantial and ongoing investigation into several traffickers,' District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg Jr. said in a statement. 'I am pleased we have now seized more than 120 antiquities throughout the investigation, and that is continuing to this day. I am grateful to our antiquities trafficking team and partners in Greece for their outstanding collaboration and partnership.'
The seizure of these objects comes after a similar announcement earlier this month, when District Attorney Bragg revealed the recovery of 107 Italian artefacts valued at $1.2 million (€1.14 million). These items were also linked to notorious antiquities smugglers such as Giacomo Medici, Giovanni Franco Becchina, and Robert Hecht.
Among the most significant of the Italian items was a Terracotta Kylix Band-Cup from the mid-6th century BCE. This ancient drinking vessel was found at the Etruscan site of Vulci in the 1960s and smuggled out of Italy by dealer Robert Hecht. It was later acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2017 before being seized by the DA's Antiquities Trafficking Unit (ATU). Other notable pieces include an Apulian Volute Krater from 320-310 BCE and a 4th-century BCE Bronze Patera, both of which were also smuggled by high-profile traffickers before being recovered by the ATU.
Since its creation at the end of 2017, the ATU has recovered almost 6,000 antiquities valued at more than $460 million (€439 million) and has returned more than 5,400 of them to 29 countries, the unit says.
This latest repatriation effort follow's the Metropolitan Museum of Art 's announcement earlier this week that it would return a 7th-century bronze head to Greece, following an internal provenance review. The museum's researchers determined the artefact had likely been illegally removed from the Archaeological Museum of Olympia in the 1930s, though the specifics of its removal remain unclear.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
4 hours ago
- Euronews
Passengers evacuated from Italian airport after 'lunatic' starts fire
A major Italian airport was forced to close off parts of its terminal on Wednesday after a man reportedly set fire to check-in desks and caused damage with a hammer. Terminal 1 of Milan Malpensa Airport was partially evacuated after a "lunatic set fire to the check-in area", according to the Lombardy Airports Association. "The situation was quickly brought under control after the arrest of the madman who set fire to and destroyed several check-in counters," the association wrote on X. The suspect has been identified by Italian media as a 28-year-old man from Mali. He'll reportedly appear in court for a fast-track hearing tomorrow. The incident happened at around 11 am when the man doused check-in counters with flammable liquid before setting them alight, also damaging the nearby walls and information screens with a hammer, according to the Corriere della Sera newspaper. Italian border force officers managed to restrain the man, while airport firefighters worked to put out the blaze, Varese News reported. A video of the incident shared on social media shows passengers fleeing the check-in area as black smoke billows from a fire. A man is then seen approaching the suspect and hitting him on the head with a fire extinguisher, causing him to fall to the ground. Several other men then help to pin down the suspect, and one of them throws a hammer away. The footage could not be independently verified by Euronews. Photographs shared by the Lombardy Airports Association on X show hundreds of passengers standing outside the terminal next to fire extinguishers, as well as firefighters working inside the evacuated check-in areas — which are blanketed in black smoke. A spokesperson for the provincial fire department told Italian media that "airport operations continued without significant disruption to air traffic". Last month, flights were delayed at another airport in the city — Milan Bergamo — due to the death of a man who was sucked into the engine of a plane, local media reported.


Euronews
a day ago
- Euronews
British man faces €1,500 fine for stolen Pompeii stones
A British tourist who attempted to steal several stones from the archaeological park of Pompeii is facing a hefty penalty from Italian authorities. The 51-year-old man from Scotland was caught with a backpack containing six artefacts - five stone fragments and a brick - taken from the ancient Roman site. The visitor was reported after being observed "picking up pieces of pavement" during an evening tour by a guide who notified park security. British man faces €1,500 fine for stolen Pompeii stones The tourist was apprehended by police officers outside the park near the Villa dei Misteri EAV station, an official confirmed last week. The UK visitor reportedly admitted that he had taken the stones to gift to his son for his personal collection of rare objects, and claimed to be unaware that it was illegal to remove artefacts from the excavation site. The stolen items were seized and given back to the archaeological park, with the visitor charged for aggravated theft. The unidentified individual could receive a court summons and is facing potential imprisonment of up to six years and a maximum penalty of €1,500. Gabriel Zuchtriegel, director of the Pompeii Archaeological Park, said: "Congratulations and thanks to the attentive tour guide, to our excellent custodians and security staff, and to the Carabinieri for this collaborative effort to protect our heritage." Stolen artefacts from Pompeii are 'cursed' Despite facing a hefty fine, the Scottish tourist may have been saved from an even worse fate. Some believe that those who steal artefacts from Pompeii are cursed with a lifetime of misfortune. The legend has led to a considerable number of items being returned to the ancient site, accompanied by letters of apology or regret. In 2020, a visitor sent back relics she had taken from Pompeii 15 years earlier, insisting the objects were "cursed". The remorseful Canadian claimed that bad luck had "plagued" her and her relatives ever since she pocketed tiles from the park when visiting in her 20s. Attempting to calm the wrath of "the gods", the woman, identifying herself as Nicole, sent back the artefacts with an apologetic letter. She claimed the theft of two mosaic pieces, a ceramic fragment, and parts of an amphora were behind her family's economic troubles and her two breast cancer diagnoses, leading to a double mastectomy.


Euronews
10-08-2025
- Euronews
Visible from space: Vesuvius fire has three fronts still active
The fire that broke out on Friday night in the Mount Vesuvius National Park continues to burn. The extremely high column of smoke produced by the fire in the national park is also visible from space. Satellite photos showing the Gulf of Naples with a long white plume rising from one side of the volcano have gone viral on the web, demonstrating the severity of the fire and the extent of the fire front. According to information from the Prefect of Naples, Michele di Bari, at the end of a meeting of the Rescue Coordination Centre, there are still three active fronts: the Valle del Gigante towards Monte Somma, where the Canadair firefighting aircraft are operating, the southern slope of the crater, where regional Civil Protection helicopters are battling the flames. And the Vicinale area, where last night's wind rekindled the flames, which were tackled by ground teams. The public prosecutor's office in Nola (Naples), which is responsible for the area, has opened a file to clarify the origin of the fire that is bringing one of the country's landscape and cultural symbols to its knees. According to what has been learnt so far, there no suspects and no crime hypotheses have been identified so far, pending the report that will be presented by the Carabinieri foresters. Since the early hours of Sunday, 6 Canadairs and 4 helicopters have been involved, in addition to 15 teams of Civil Protection volunteers mobilised by an extraordinary decree of the Minister of Civil Protection and Sea Policies, at the request of the Campania Region. The Fire Brigade has reinforced its presence with two forest fire-fighting modules from Tuscany and Marche and reinforcement teams from Benevento and Salerno. On the health and logistical front, the mayors of the four worst hit municipalities have activated the Municipal Operations Centres and a fixed 24-hour medical station in Terzigno. The Asl Napoli 1 Centro has made the residence of the Ospedale del Mare available to host volunteers from other regions. On the environmental and economic front, Italian farmers' group Coldiretti is reporting extensive damage to the Lacryma Christi DOP vine cultivation right on the eve of the grape harvest, as well as to the Pellecchiella apricot and Pomodorino del Piennolo DOP tomato cultivations. Also at risk are agritourism sites and tasting routes, with a very hard impact on local tourism and agriculture. Legambiente report: 56,263 hectares already up in smoke in Italy The seriousness of the situation is part of an alarming national context: according to Legambiente's report Italia in fumo (Italy in smoke), between 1 January and 31 July 2025 there were 851 fires for a total of 56,263 hectares burnt, already exceeding the surface area affected in all of 2024. In particular, over 18,700 hectares of Natura 2000 areas were destroyed in 253 fire episodes, confirming a trend defined as "chronic" by the association, which has launched an appeal to safeguard Italy's natural heritage.