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Seuso Treasure

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromSevso Treasure)
Roman hoard
The Seuso Treasure exhibited in 1990.
Detail of the Achilles plate
The stoup set

TheSeuso Treasure orSevso[1] Treasure (Hungarian:Seuso-kincsek;Croatian:Seusovo blago), is ahoard ofsilver objects (14 items) from the lateRoman Empire. The first pieces appeared on the market inLondon in 1980, and the treasure was acquired by a consortium headed bySpencer Compton, 7th Marquess of Northampton. Documentation was provided in which it was stated that it had been found in the Tyre and Sidon regions ofLebanon. It was put up for sale inNew York City in 1990 bySotheby's, but was halted when the documentation was found to be false, and the governments ofHungary,Yugoslavia (nowCroatia) andLebanon made claims of ownership. The claims of ownership by these countries were rejected by a US court, and the treasure remained in the possession of the Marquess of Northampton.Scotland Yard still has an open case on the matter.

The origin andprovenance of the treasure are likely known, but not publicly acknowledged. There is much scientific evidence to indicate that the hoard was first acquired in the 1970s after the murder of a Hungarian soldier, who discovered the treasure during illicit digging at an established archaeological site in Hungary.[2] On 26 March 2014Prime Minister of HungaryViktor Orbán announced that half of the Seuso Treasure (seven items) had been bought by Hungary.[3][4] The Prime Minister described it as "Hungary's family silverware".[5] In June 2017 the remaining seven artifacts also returned to Hungary, being bought for €28 million.[6] Today, it is exhibited in the Hungarian National Museum.[7]

Contents

[edit]

Thetreasure trove consists of fourteen large decorated silver vessels and the copper cauldron which contained them, and has been dated to the late-fourth or early-fifth century AD. Most notable is a large dish, 70 cm in diameter and weighing nearly 9 kg, which bears the inscription:

Hec Seuso tibi durent per saecula multa
Posteris ut prosint vascula digna tuis
May these, O Seuso, yours for many ages be
Small vessels fit to serve your offspring worthily.

Discovery

[edit]
József Sümegh, who is claimed to have found the treasure around 1975–76 near Polgárdi

The hoard first came to attention in 1980, when a single piece in the possession of two antiquities dealers fromVienna was offered for sale in London. Further pieces reached the market, and what is believed to be the complete hoard was acquired by a consortium headed bySpencer Compton, 7th Marquess of Northampton.[8] Documentation supplied by the Lebanese embassy in Switzerland stated that the treasure had originally been found in theTyre andSidon regions of Lebanon, and on that basis the consortium negotiated to sell the collection to theGetty Museum inLos Angeles for $10 million. When that deal fell through, the treasure was put up for sale in New York in 1990 bySotheby's, and was described as being from "what was once the province ofPhoenicia in theEastern Roman Empire".

Legal dispute

[edit]

The sale was halted when documentation was thought to be false, and the governments of Hungary, Yugoslavia and Lebanon each made claims of ownership. Hungarian authorities claim that the treasure was discovered by a young soldier, József Sümegh, in around 1975–76 near the town ofPolgárdi in central Hungary. Sümegh's body was found in a nearby cellar in 1980. The official investigation at the time determined that he had committed suicide, but the police later concluded that he had been killed.[9] As of 2012 the criminal investigation into his death is still ongoing.[10]

Yugoslavia's case was based on claims that the treasure had been originally found on 30 June 1960 in the village ofBarbariga inIstria (present-dayCroatia).[11] The village is some 20 kilometres north of the city ofPula, an important city in Roman times. According to local witnesses, the treasure had been discovered in old trenches in a nearbyYugoslav People's Army (JNA) compound.[11] In the 1980s the JNA gave permission to local archaeologists, led byVesna Girardi-Jurkić, to further excavate the site. According to unconfirmed eyewitness reports of army excavations, the 14 known artefacts were only a small part of a much larger treasure trove as it took soldiers and police brought to the site six days to list all the items found at the site. However, very few details of the project were ever released to the public as the alleged site was entirely within a military area closed off to civilians.[11] Yugoslav archaeologists' efforts eventually failed to provide any conclusive evidence for the treasure's origin, although the soil residue found on the artefacts was proved to match the samples of soil from the area.[11] After thebreakup of Yugoslavia the newly independent Croatia pressed on with the case and included the results of the soil analysis in its formal ownership claim to a New York court.[11]

The Hippolytus set

In November 1993, theNew York Court of Appeals rejected the claims, and found no case for removing it from the possession of the Marquess of Northampton 1987 Settlement (a trust established by the Marquess of Northampton);[12] the decision was confirmed by the Appellate Division in April 1994.[13] The silver was locked in a bank vault while further legal proceedings followed. The Marquess sued his solicitorsAllen & Overy for damages in relation to advice given during the purchase of the silver, and that case was settled out of court in 1999 for a reported £15 million.[14] On 25 June 1999, in written answers to questions in theHouse of Lords, the British government confirmed that it had no further interest in the case and confirmed the decision not to prosecute.[15]

The Hungarian claim of possession is likely justified by the fact that on one of the main plates, the "Hunting Plate", an inscription is to be seen. It reads "Pelso", the Roman name forLake Balaton in Hungary; the lake is just west of the alleged place of discovery.[16] Also near to the lake, in 1873 a presumed Romantripod (later restored, upon which it was discovered that it is aquadripod) was discovered; according to scholars, this object featured similar decoration as the Seuso Treasure items, and is very likely a creation of the same hands. It is housed in theHungarian National Museum inBudapest.[17]

Later developments

[edit]

In September 2006, London auctioneerBonhams announced that it would exhibit the treasure privately, in a move seen as a prelude to a sale by private treaty or by auction at a future date.[8] A spokesman for theMinistry of Education and Culture of Hungary, which had still claimed it, said it had informed British authorities that it must not be sold.[18] On 12 October 2006, further written answers were given in theHouse of Lords to questions byColin Renfrew, Baron Renfrew of Kaimsthorn, particularly relating to Hungary's possible revised claim to the treasure since itsadmission to the European Union in 2004.[19] Bonhams went ahead with its private exhibition on 17 October 2006.[20]

The "Hunting plate" in theHungarian Parliament Building

In March 2007,The Art Newspaper reported that a further "187 silvergilt spoons, 37 silvergilt drinking cups, and 5 silver bowls", previously unknown, but part of the original hoard, were reputed to exist.[21] Research presented in February 2008 by the Hungarian archaeologist Zsolt Visy strengthened the view that the origin of the treasure may be the Lake Balaton region of Hungary.[22]

TheChannel 4 archaeology programmeTime Team aired aspecial on the treasure in December 2008.[23] The programme presented Hungary's evidence for the likely origin of the hoard being near the town ofPolgárdi. The Marquess of Northampton withdrew from planned participation in the programme and Channel 4 was not given permission to film the treasure, held in Bonhams' vault in London.

Return to Hungary

[edit]

On 26 March 2014,Viktor Orbán, the Hungarian prime minister, announced that half of the Seuso Treasure (seven items) had been returned to Hungary, for a sum of €15 million.[3][4] The seven artefacts were put on temporary display at theHungarian Parliament Building on 29 March 2014. On 12 July 2017, theHungarian PM announced that the other seven pieces had been brought back to Hungary, and the treasure would be displayed together.[24] Since 28 June 2019, the complete treasure has been displayed in the Hungarian National Museum as a permanent exhibition "The Seuso Treasure. The Splendour ofRoman Pannonia".[25]

See also

[edit]

Gallery

[edit]
  • Geometric plate
    Geometric plate
  • Hunting plate
    Hunting plate
  • Hunting plate (detail)
    Hunting plate (detail)
  • Dionysus
    Dionysus
  • Dionysus
    Dionysus
  • Animal stoup
    Animal stoup
  • Perfume box
    Perfume box
  • Achilles plate
    Achilles plate
  • Meleager plate
    Meleager plate
  • Meleager plate (detail)
    Meleager plate (detail)

References

[edit]
  1. ^The incorrect spellingSevso was spread by journalism and became the most widespread spelling of this name even in scholarship. However, no variant of Latin orthography uses the lowercase letter ⟨v⟩ in front of another consonant:in all forms of Latin orthography in lowercase, only the letter ⟨u⟩ can stand before another consonant, and such a letter always represents the sound /u/, in the case of Seuso, for the Latin diphthong /eu/. In the Latin script variant where only uppercase letters are used, however, the spelling of SEVSO would be normal.
  2. ^"Time Team Specials – The Mystery of the Roman Treasure – Channel 4". channel4.com. Retrieved2015-08-30.
  3. ^ab"Orbán: Magyarország visszaszerezte a Seuso-kincset". hvg.hu. 26 March 2014. Retrieved2014-03-26.
  4. ^ab"Hungary buys back 7 Roman-era silver trays, jugs". idahostatesman.com. 26 March 2014. Retrieved2014-03-26.
  5. ^"Sevso Treasure, "Hungary's family silverware," returned". Budapest Business Journal. 26 March 2014. Retrieved2014-03-30.
  6. ^"Baán: Hetek óta itthon van a Seuso-kincs, a TEK hozta haza". HVG. 12 July 2017. Retrieved2017-07-12.
  7. ^"The Seuso Treasure - The Splendour of Roman Pannonia".Hungarian National Museum. Retrieved17 September 2023.
  8. ^abAntiques Trade GazetteArchived 2007-09-29 at theWayback Machine, 30 September 2006.
  9. ^"Helyi divattal igazolják a Seuso-kincsek eredetét – Hírek – Múlt-kor történelmi magazin". mult-kor.hu. 13 March 2008. Retrieved2015-08-30.
  10. ^"Bűnügy: Bors: újra nyomoz az NNI a Seuso-kincseket megtaláló Sümegh meggyilkolása ügyében – HVG.hu". hvg.hu. 3 August 2012. Retrieved2015-08-30.
  11. ^abcdePeritz, Romina (28 March 2014)."Borba za neprocjenjivo Seusovo blago".Jutarnji list (in Croatian). Retrieved7 October 2016.
  12. ^Republic of Croatia, et al. v. Trustee of the Marquess of Northampton 1987 Settlement, 203 A.D.2d 167, 610 N.Y.S.2d 263 (1994);Republic of Croatia, et al. v. Trustee of the Marquess of Northampton 1987 Settlement, 232 A.D.2d 616, 648 N.Y.S.2d 25 (1st Dep't 1996).)
  13. ^Ancient silver returned to owner. upi.com April 22, 1994
  14. ^The Times, 8 May 1999.
  15. ^"Sevso Case: Decision not to Prosecute".Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). United Kingdom:House of Commons. 25 June 1999. col. WA111. Archived fromthe original on 2006-10-12. Retrieved2018-09-18.
  16. ^Gibbon, K.F.; American Council for Cultural Policy (2005).Who Owns the Past?: Cultural Policy, Cultural Property, and the Law. Rutgers University Press. p. 94.ISBN 9780813536873. Retrieved2015-08-30.{{cite book}}:|author2= has generic name (help)
  17. ^Landesman, Peter (November 2001)."The Curse of the Sevso Silver – The Atlantic".The Atlantic. theatlantic.com. Retrieved2015-08-30.
  18. ^"Sevso Treasure Up For Sale" at culture.hu – Hungarian Ministry of Education and Culture.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^Hansard 12 October 2006
  20. ^Art NewspaperArchived 2012-02-05 at theWayback Machine,Times andGuardian
  21. ^"The silver missing from the Sevso hoard?". theartnewspaper.com. Archived fromthe original on 2007-03-10. Retrieved2015-08-30.
  22. ^"Archaeology of the Sevso Treasure | Current Archaeology". archaeology.co.uk. 18 February 2008. Retrieved2015-08-30.
  23. ^"Time Team Specials – Episode Guide – Channel 4". channel4.com. Retrieved2015-08-30.
  24. ^"Orbán: Hazakerült a Seuso-kincsek további hét darabja". hvg.hu. 12 July 2017. Retrieved2017-11-28.
  25. ^"Permanent exhibition".Seuso Research project official site. Retrieved17 September 2023.

Sources

[edit]
  • Antiques Trade Gazette, 30 September 2006
  • Ruth E. Leader-Newby —Silver and Society in Late Antiquity: Functions and Meanings of Silver Plate in the Fourth to Seventh Centuries
  • Marlia Mundell Mango and Anna Bennett — "The Sevso Treasure" inJournal of Roman Archaeology Suppl. 12:1, 1994.

Further reading

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  • Leo V. Gagion, Harvey Kurzweil and Ludovic de Walden — "The Trial of the Sevso Treasure: What a Nation Will Do in the Name of Its Heritage" in Kate FitzGibbon, ed. —Who Owns the Past? Cultural Policy, Cultural Property and the Law. (Rutgers University Press, 2005)ISBN 0-8135-3687-1

External links

[edit]
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