Art wars rumble on.Russia and Germany take steps to return national treasures looted during the Second World War More than 60 years after the end of World War II End of World War II can refer to:
Any tangible commodity purchased by households to satisfy their wants and needs. Consumer goods may be durable or nondurable. Durable goods (e.g., autos, furniture, and appliances) have a significant life span, often defined as three years or more, and . After protracted pro·tract tr.v. pro·tract·ed, pro·tract·ing, pro·tracts 1. To draw out or lengthen in time; prolong: disputants who needlessly protracted the negotiations. 2. negotiations, 111 of the medieval panes were returned in 2002, restored and reinstalled at the church. The last six, representing scenes from the Old Testament, were believed destroyed until 2005 when they were discovered at Moscow's Pushkin Museum. It took another three years to win agreement for their eventual return to Germany. Disputes over art treasures seized during and after the war have marred German-Russian relations for years. In the 1950s, after the death of Stalin, the Kremlin authorised the return to Germany of 1.5 million works of art, including the celebrated Pergamon Altar, built in the second century BCE BCE abbr. 1. Bachelor of Chemical Engineering 2. Bachelor of Civil Engineering BCE Abbreviation for before the Common Era. and now one of Berlin's top tourist attractions. But further negotiations have proven difficult. In 1997, the Russian parliament passed a law declaring artwork seized from Germany to be rightful spoils of war to compensate for the sacking of its own collections. This has allowed the Pushkin Museum, for example, to hold on to the so-called 'Priam Treasure', bronze and gold artifacts artifacts see specimen artifacts. dating back to Homeric times, which were dug up in the 1870s by the German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann at the site of the ancient city of Troy. Many of these treasures, including that of Priam, were held secretly for years after the war in Russian museum stock rooms and only recently brought out to be put on public display. In 2007, for example, the Pushkin Museum staged a major exhibition of 700 Merovingian artifacts that had disappeared from Berlin in 1945 and that were believed destroyed. Germany has encountered similar problems in seeking the return of art treasures from other former Soviet republics. Last summer, a couple of German tourists visiting a museum in Simferopol, southern Ukraine, stumbled across 87 paintings which, prior to the war, belonged to a museum in Aachen, in western Germany. German authorities, who thought they had been destroyed, have now started negotiating their return. But German foreign ministry spokesman Jens Ploetner recently acknowledged that this was a "sensitive" subject given the fact that "Ukraine lost a lot of its cultural heritage when under German occupation". Disputes over war booty are not just limited to the former Eastern Bloc. Last year the respected news magazine Der Spiegel reported that the French army had also seized a number of paintings from a museum in Wuppertal, in western Germany, at the end of the war. Several of them, including one Renoir and two Delacroix, are now exposed at the Louvre Louvre (l `vrə), foremost French museum of art, located in Paris. The building was a royal fortress and palace built by Philip II in the late 12th cent. in Paris, but Germany has preferred to say
nothing lest it offend its neighbour and ally, according to the
magazine.
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