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CAIS ARCHAEOLOGICAL
& CULTURAL NEWS©
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London
and Paris Markets
Fooded with Looted Iranian Antiquities
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18
May 2005
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Thousands
of objects have been plundered from a newly
discovered site at Jiroft
By: Edek Osser
In
January 2001 a group of Iranians from Jiroft in
the southwestern province of Kerman stumbled upon
an ancient tomb. Inside they found a hoard of
objects decorated with highly distinctive
engravings of animals, mythological figures and
architectural motifs.
They did not realise it at the time but they had
just made one of the most remarkable
archaeological discoveries of recent years, one
that is radically altering accepted notions of the
development of the world’s earliest
civilisations in Iran and Mesopotamia between the
fourth and third millennia BC.
A few weeks after the discovery, officials from
Iran’s Ministry of Culture, vastly out numbered
by local people, watched hopelessly as thousands
systematically dug up the area. The locals set up
a highly organised impromptu system to manage the
looting: each family was allocated an equal plot
of six square-metres to dig.
This organised pillaging continued for an entire
year. Dozens of tombs were discovered, some
containing up to 60 objects, and thousands of
ancient objects were removed. All of these were
destined for overseas markets.
In February 2002 Iran’s Islamic police finally
arrived in force to stop the destruction. Some
2,000 objects were confiscated from locals in
Jiroft and other hoards of the ancient artefacts
ready to be shipped overseas were seized in Tehran
and at Bandar Abbas.
The objects confiscated by the police are unlike
anything ever seen before by archaeologists. Many
are made from chlorite, a grey-green soft stone,
others are in copper, bronze, terracotta, even
lapis lazuli. They are now being studied by a
group of Iranian archaeologists led by Professor
Yousef Madjidzadeh.
Official excavation of the site began in February
2003. It is focusing on both the necropolis, which
was looted extensively, and on an ancient
settlement not discovered by the looters.
The finds at Jiroft were first publicised last
August when an illustrated catalogue of some of
the objects was circulated at a conference in
Tehran (Yousef Majidzadeh, Jiroft: the earliest
Oriental civilisation, Organisation of the
Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance, Tehran,
2003).
But much of the damage done at Jiroft is
irreversible: the tombs that were plundered were
completely emptied and hoards of the artefacts
have already appeared for sale in Europe. In 2002
vases from the site were offered for sale at
Drouot in Paris and, according to market
specialists, the artefacts are on offer with
several dealers in France. They are usually
catalogued as vases from “Kerman” or with the
more generic description of “Middle Eastern”.
A group of some 80 Jiroft artefacts was known to
be on offer in London last year with a price tag
of £600,000. An important group, seen by the
author of this article, is now being offered for
sale in a prominent London gallery. The dealer
said that he is worried about the growing number
of fake Jiroft vases now circulating on the
market. These could be the work of the very same
locals who looted the site in the first place and
have access to the same chlorite quarries of their
ancestors.
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