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Germany returns ancient Mayan artefacts found in farmhouse cellar

Germany on Friday returned a collection of ancient Mayan artefacts to Guatemala and Mexico after police found them stashed in the cellar of a farmhouse in Saxony-Anhalt state last year.

The Mayan artefacts are handed over
Francisco Quiroga, Ambassador of Mexico, Michelle Müntefering (SPD), Minister of State at the Federal Foreign Office, Reiner Haseloff (CDU), Prime Minister of Saxony-Anhalt, and Jorge Lemcke, Ambassador of Guatemala. Photo: dpa | Jörg Carstensen

The 13 objects include vases, figurines and plates and date back to between 250 and 850 AD, the regional government of Saxony-Anhalt said.

State premier Reiner Haseloff handed them over to Guatemalan ambassador Jorge Lemcke Arevalo and Mexican ambassador Francisco Quiroga at a ceremony in Berlin on Friday.

Eleven of the objects were made in what is now Guatemala but they also include two figurines from Teotihuacan, the largest city in pre-Aztec central Mexico, located about 40 kilometres from Mexico City.

“This gives us hope that other owners of similar pieces in private collections will follow the same path” of returning them, Arevalo told a press
conference.

Quiroga called the gesture an “outstanding example”.

“Illegal trade in cultural objects must be stopped and combated,” Haseloff said, adding that the handover was intended to raise awareness.

“Objects pillaged or stolen from former colonies can be found not only in museums, but also in our cellars or attics,” he said.

The farmhouse’s previous owner had buried the Mayan treasures in a box in 2007 along with two World War II rifles that had belonged to his grandfather.

He contacted police in 2020 to confess the box could be found in the cellar of the farmhouse, saying he wanted to comply with the law on handing over illegal weapons.

Police found the guns but to their amazement, also uncovered the objects wrapped in newspaper, local prosecutors said.

The man said he was unaware of the objects’ provenance or of their real value.

According to the Saxony-Anhalt authorities, the objects were probably stolen by grave robbers in Guatemala and Mexico before being sold on the black market.

SEE ALSO: 6 things you never knew linked Mexico and Germany

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HISTORY

Richly-decorated Roman mosaic uncovered during Swiss building works

Pipe laying works in the Swiss town of Avenches have led to the discovery of a highly detailed Roman mosaic.

Richly-decorated Roman mosaic uncovered during Swiss building works
A detail of the mosaic. Photo: L. Francey/O. Heubi, Site et Musée romains d’Avenches

The mosaic features a border of yellow stone tiles known as tesserae while the central section shows a 'cantharus' drinking vessel upon which two birds are perched.

Measuring 1.55 metres squared, the mosaic will be cleaned on site before being moved to the Roman Museum in Avenches.

Read also: Ancient Roman fridge discovered near Basel keeps beer cool for months

The floor tiling was found in a little-explored section on the outer edges of the Roman settlement of Aventicum, the canton of Vaud said in a statement.

The amphitheatre of Avenches is still used for concerts today. Photo: Swiss Tourism

Founded around 15BC, Aventicum became the capital of the Roman Switzerland after the conquest of territory previously held by the tribe known as the Helvetii.

Remains of the colony's amphitheatre, which could hold up to 16,000 people, a theatre and the so-called Cigognier, or stork, temple can still be visited today.

The Roman museum is housed in a five-story medieval tower and displays Roman objects from Aventicum.

This bust of emperor Marcus Aurelius was discovered in Avenches. Photo: Swiss Tourism

Perhaps the most famous of those finds is a gold bust the emperor Marcus Aurelius which was found at some point during the late 1930s and early 1940s. Unfortunately, only a copy is on display in the Avenches museum as the original is considered too valuable to be housed there.

Read also: Archaeologists find 7,000-year-old human remains in Swiss city