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Ghana: Britain to Return Looted Crown Jewels to Ghana, but Only On Loan

todayJanuary 30, 2024

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The UK is set to “loan back” a selection of gold and silver artefacts once worn by members of Asante royalty that were taken from Ghana some 150 years ago. The precious regalia will be displayed in the city of Kumasi, once the capital of the powerful Asante Empire.

More than 30 pieces will be loaned back to their place of origin, two of the UK’s biggest museums announced on Thursday.

The Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) will lend 17 items, while the British Museum will send 15 pieces – with ornaments, jewellery and talismans among the treasures.

They will be loaned to the Manhyia Palace Museum in Kumasi on a three-year basis, with an option to extend for the same amount of time.

A joint statement by all three museums acknowledges that the objects seized had “cultural, historical and spiritual significance to the Asante people”.

The seizures are also “indelibly linked to British colonial history in West Africa, with many of them looted from Kumasi during the Anglo-Asante wars of the 19th century”.

Just a sample of the dazzlingly crafted gold regalia of the court of the Asantehene (Asante king) in Ghana.These items are of deeply significant cultural, historical, and spiritual significance to the Asante people. They are also indelibly linked to British colonial history,… pic.twitter.com/sNFzfte0Gk— V&A (@V_and_A) January 25, 2024

The loan was negotiated not between governments but by the museums and Otumfo Osei Tutu II, the current Asante king known as the Asantehene.

The items will go on display to celebrate the Asantehene’s silver jubilee later this year.

‘Crown Jewels’

Tristram Hunt, director of the V&A, said the items taken from the court of the Asante royals were the equivalent of the UK’s Crown Jewels.

Many are crafted in gold, the source of Asante kings’ wealth and a symbol in their culture of the sun, life force and royal authority.

The objects were mostly taken during wars between the British and Asante empires, including a sword of state, a gold peace pipe, a ceremonial headdress worn at coronations, and gold “soul washers’ badges” worn by royal attendants charged with reinvigorating the king.

Speaking to the BBC, Hunt said that when it came to objects acquired through war, “we have a responsibility to the countries of origin to think about how we can share those more fairly today”.

“It doesn’t seem to me that all of our museums will fall down if we build up these kind of partnerships and exchanges,” he added.

Hunt stressed the items had not been permanently returned to Ghana, saying the new cultural partnership “is not restitution by the back door”.