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Italy, Princeton University Museum Sign Antiquities Deal

ROME

The Italian Culture Ministry and the Princeton University Art Museum signed a deal Tuesday for the return of eight disputed antiquities to Italy Rome’s latest coup in its efforts to recover treasures it says were looted from the country.

Under the deal, the New Jersey museum will transfer legal title to Italy of eight ancient artifacts including pottery and sculpture from the Greek and Etruscan cultures, the ministry said in a statement.

Half of the objects will be handed over within the next 60 days, while the other four will remain at the museum until 2011. In exchange, Italy will loan Princeton other treasures of “equal historical-artistical interest,” the statement said.

The two sides will also increase cultural cooperation through joint exhibitions and archaeological digs.

Among the objects covered by the deal is a prized “psykter” a Greek vase decorated with red figures that was used for cooling wine. Made in Athens around 500 B.C., a period of unequaled mastery for pottery in the ancient world, the vase was imported by the Etruscan culture that dominated central Italy.

The psykter is one of the four pieces that will remain on loan in Princeton for four years. The other returning objects include a 6th-century B.C. Etruscan statue depicting the head of a winged lion and other vases from Greece and southern Italy painted with mythological themes.

The agreement follows similar deals signed by other top U.S. museums to return antiquities that Italy claims were smuggled out of the country and sold to collections and institutions worldwide.

So far, artifacts including statues, silverware, frescoes and vases from Roman, Greek and Etruscan times have been the object of deals with the Metropolitan Museum in New York, Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts and the J. Paul Getty Museum in California.

Italian authorities are still in negotiations with other museums across the globe, and the judiciary in Rome is pressing on with the criminal prosecution of former Getty curator Marion True and art dealer Robert Hecht a case that has spearheaded Italy’s aggressive crackdown on the illegal antiquities trade.

The two Americans are on trial in Rome accused of knowingly acquiring dozens of ancient artifacts that authorities maintain were stolen or unearthed illegally and smuggled out of Italy. Both defendants deny wrongdoing.



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