A Collection of 12 Antiques and Artworks Retrieved from U.S. Has Been Allocated to The Tibet Museum
2021-09-30 02:33
A collection of 12 antiques and artworks retrieved from overseas has been allocated to the Tibet Museum in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, said the National Cultural Heritage Administration on September 26th.
 
Returing Ceremony
 
The Manhattan District Attorney's Office in the U.S. found a batch of cultural relics in March, which were later confirmed to be illegally smuggled from China. The administration in Beijing requested repatriation of these antiques, and altogether the 12 items were delivered to Beijing in mid-July. On June 8, the Chinese Consulate General in New York and the Manhattan District Attorney's Office held a ceremony to handover the antiques.
 

Consul General Huang Ping signed the documents

 
According to experts, these artifacts are believed to be derived from the southwestern part of the country, with the earliest ones dating back to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). They have important historical, artistic and scientific values, experts said. Based on preliminary examination, six of them are considered third-class cultural relics according to the country's relic grading system.
 
Some of the Antiques
 
Both China and the U.S. are signatories of the UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property. Before this, the U.S. had returned multiple batches of cultural relics to China, respectively, in March 2011, December 2015, and February 2019, according to the administration.
 
The Tibet Museum is the region's largest comprehensive museum. These newly received relics will be displayed in its new exhibition in the future.