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Repatriation
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US government returns looted sarcophagus to Egypt

A trafficked coffin that may have belonged to an ancient priest has been returned

Torey Akers
5 January 2023
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"Green coffin" repatriation ceremony Egypt Ministry of Foreign Affairs

"Green coffin" repatriation ceremony Egypt Ministry of Foreign Affairs

The US government has returned a looted wooden sarcophagus to its rightful home in Egypt, officials said on Monday 2 January. The Manhattan District Attorney’s office determined the coffin had been trafficked 15 years ago from the Abu Sir Necropolis, an archaeological area on the western bank of the Nile River, by a “well-organised network” that smuggled the sarcophagus from Cairo to Germany en route to the United States.

Before its return, the sarcophagus was even displayed at the Houston Museum of Natural Sciences. Mostafa Waziri, an official at Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, identified the object as a relic of the Late Dynastic Period, possibly belonging to an ancient priest named Ankhenmaat, according to Associated Press.

This latest repatriation effort is part of a continued campaign by the Egyptian government to obtain looted artefacts in circulation around the world. In 2021, Egyptian authorities secured more than 5,000 stolen antiquities from all over the globe.

RepatriationCairoAncient EgyptLooted artMuseums & HeritageHeritageArchaeology
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