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Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? - Culture - Nairaland

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Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by michigang: 6:58am On Sep 05, 2021
Should the British Museum return its priceless collection of Benin Bronzes?

For years, the museum has stood firm in its refusal to hand back artwork looted from the ancient kingdom of Benin, in what is now southern Nigeria. In doing so, it has defied the trend set by regional institutions in Britain, such as the university of Aberdeen.

Earlier this year, the university confirmed that it would repatriate a bust of an Oba, or king of Benin, which it has had since the 1950s. As a result of refusing to take a similar stance, the British Museum has been heavily criticised – but there is a strong case to be made that its approach is the correct one.

Nobody knows for sure how many artefacts were taken by the 1,500 invading soldiers armed with the latest Maxim guns during their punitive raid in 1897. But six months on, the Bronzes were first put on display in London.

They caused a sensation. From the start, their artistic value was obvious; several thousand were quickly snapped up, mostly by European museums, but as many as 6,000 ended up in private hands. One of these, an Oba’s head, recently sold for £10 million in 2016, double the price of another one just nine years earlier.

Given the circumstances under which they were acquired, there has naturally been great interest in getting them back. Until recently, this has met with little success. In 1977, when the Nigerian government asked the British Museum for the loan of an ivory mask depicting Queen Idia, mother to the legendary Oba Esigie (1504-50), they were rebuffed on the grounds that it would be subject to different climatic conditions and much greater humidity.

This, it was claimed, might cause the ivory to shift and crack.

The Rhodes Must Fall movement, which started at the University of Cape Town in 2015 – and quickly travelled to the University of Oxford – has increased the clamour to return the Bronzes.

Germany, which has the second-largest collection in the world of Bronzes, recently promised to return 1,200 objects.

France's president Emmanuel Macron has been similarly receptive to the idea that France should return all ‘objects taken by force or presumed to be acquired through inequitable conditions’ as soon as possible.

Yet the British Museum, with the largest collection of all (about 900 objects, of which some 100 are on permanent display), is holding out, even if the museum suggests it is amenable to the prospect of returning the items. But there is a good case to be made for leaving the bronzes where they are. The most obvious reason relates to their safety. Thefts from Nigerian museums are legendary, leading one minister of culture and information to bemoan in 1996 that ‘we are losing our cultural heritage at such an alarming rate that unless the trend is arrested soon, we may have no cultural artefacts to bequeath to our progeny.’

Even if the British Museum did agree to return the Bronzes, there is another dilemma: who exactly owns them? The current Oba claims that they belong to the people of a kingdom which doesn’t exist.

This is at least partly why he is at loggerheads with Godwin Obaseki, the governor of Edo state, of which Benin City is the capital. The latter initially backed a new royal museum, but then appeared to change his mind in favour of another museum scheduled to open in 2025. The Oba has since appealed to the federal government to step in and take possession of the expected German consignment, a farcical notion given its track record in this regard, but a sign of the Oba’s desperation.

If there is a solution to be found in this messy and fractious debate, the argument made by Moyo Okediji, the Benin-based artist and academic, seems plausible. He said that the bronzes ‘caged, displayed on blocks and pedestals, or auctioned from hand to hand like the human cargoes which they followed across the Atlantic Ocean’ have been robbed of their spiritual essence, serving as they did a living deity. Okediji also thinks that returning them ‘is to pretend that such a reparation fully atones’ for an act of colonial outrage.

But if giving them back can't undo the damage, it seems reasonable to make the case that the Bronzes – whether put on display in London or closer to where they were made – should be viewed as a vanished African kingdom’s gift to the world.


https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/should-the-british-museum-return-its-benin-bronzes-

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Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by Blake755: 7:03am On Sep 05, 2021
Hmm
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by Sonnobax15(m): 7:45am On Sep 05, 2021
cheesy
Well,the Binis have a very long and interesting heritage, raging from their different diversity down to their rich tradition....
As for me,I believe the bronze belongs to the Benin people....

The Problem here is that most of these bronzes were actually stolen from africa with the help of our own African brothers.....I don't think it should be a difficult thing for the Britons to return such artifacts back to where they rightfully belongs.

35 Likes 1 Share

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by UltimateSpice: 7:45am On Sep 05, 2021
It was unfortunate that the British robbed Africans of their heritage. The bronzes belonged to the Edo people and it is not late to return them to their ancestral home.

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by money121(m): 7:46am On Sep 05, 2021
Ok
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by MrPresident1: 7:46am On Sep 05, 2021
angry
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by Nobody: 7:46am On Sep 05, 2021
It's owned by the people of Wakanda

2 Likes

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by RedChiefPriest: 7:47am On Sep 05, 2021
No be Wakanda?


Wakanda Forever
I so much love that movie and setting
Rest in peace Tchalla
Rest in peace Chadwick

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by Lamasta(m): 7:48am On Sep 05, 2021
The Benin kingdom owns it

3 Likes

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by eastOFwest(m): 7:49am On Sep 05, 2021
UltimateSpice:
Who else but the Benin people?

Governor

1 Like

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by saddler: 7:51am On Sep 05, 2021
cool

Leave long story!

The bronze belongs to the Edo people. Just f**cking return them

4 Likes

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by Coly2012(m): 7:52am On Sep 05, 2021
Let the royal palace take custody of the bronzes, as the Benin people are the true owner,if the state keeps is,it becomes a state property as the esan,ijwe,auchi,esako and other clans become co owner of what they no nothing about.

6 Likes

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by vikkysexy1: 7:58am On Sep 05, 2021
After which we go sell am give the British back because we no get money
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by Goldbw122(m): 8:00am On Sep 05, 2021
Remain a mystery
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by Number1benue: 8:01am On Sep 05, 2021
eastOFwest:


Governor


No! No! No! It was plundered from the covers of the oba past, so in essence it should go back there. Thank you smiley
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by Gosj001: 8:04am On Sep 05, 2021
Interesting read.










I still sell affordable laptops with free delivery and pay on delivery.
Details on my signature
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by otomatic(m): 8:04am On Sep 05, 2021
The Benin kingdom from which it was stolen and which is represented by the Oba.

4 Likes

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by internationalman(m): 8:05am On Sep 05, 2021
It belongs to the oba palace which represents the entire people of Edo or Benin..

Those artifacts should never land in the hands of Obaseki because he will leave soon. Only God knows what the next governor would do with it.

4 Likes

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by cassidy1996(m): 8:10am On Sep 05, 2021
The Benin's simple
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by suffering: 8:17am On Sep 05, 2021
Na them know. If juju was real, this insult for wipe out the lineage of those culture vultures. See now, the white man is doing shakara with our own stolen property. O ma se.

4 Likes

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by 9japride(m): 8:18am On Sep 05, 2021
It belongs to the Palace of the Oba. Knowing how petty our politicians are, if someone from another tribe then becomes the governor he/she may mess up the whole thing just to spite the Benin people.

4 Likes

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by columbus007(m): 8:20am On Sep 05, 2021
Well , maybe your dad.
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by temitope27(m): 8:24am On Sep 05, 2021
Benin owns it ofcourse

1 Like

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by 1manuel(m): 8:32am On Sep 05, 2021
Sonnobax15:
cheesy
Well,the Binis have a very long and interesting heritage, raging from their different diversity down to their rich tradition....
As for me,I believe the bronze belongs to the Benin people....

The Problem here is that most of these bronzes were actually stolen from africa with the help of our own African brothers.....I don't think it should be a difficult this for the Britons to return such artifacts back to where they rightfully belongs.

Oga,go and read history,no one helped them,they invaded Benin and looted The kingdom

1 Like

Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by Starboytwo(m): 8:37am On Sep 05, 2021
anytime i see this kinda news I get saddened. Our artifacts, our bronze, our heritage looted without remorse chaii.

Henceforth, I call on all G boys to triple the bombing hustle. Collect with reckless abandon till they return all that was stolen.
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by southsouthking(m): 8:37am On Sep 05, 2021
OBA
Re: Who Really Owns The Benin Bronzes? by seunmsg(m): 8:37am On Sep 05, 2021
But if giving them back can't undo the damage, it seems reasonable to make the case that the Bronzes – whether put on display in London or closer to where they were made – should be viewed as a vanished African kingdom’s gift to the world.

The writer is mad. All the artifacts should be returned to where they stole them from. The argument of losing their spiritual purpose is rubbish. Once the artifacts are back to their natural abode, the spirits in them will also return. Returning them back is a step forward in undoing the damage that was done to the Benin royalty. They rest of the world can come to Benin to view them on display.

5 Likes

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