Pope Francis ordered the Vatican Museums to return the three Parthenon marbles held of their collections to Greece. In a press release at this time (16 November), Vatican officers referred to the works’ repatriation as a “donation” to Ieronymos II, the Orthodox Christian archbishop of Athens and head of the Greek Orthodox Church, and stated it signaled “a concrete signal of his honest want to comply with within the ecumenical path of fact”, in line with the Related Press.
The three sculptural fragments—a part of the pinnacle of the horse pulling Athena’s chariot within the frieze on the west aspect of the Parthenon, and parts of the heads of a boy and a bearded man—have been within the Vatican Museums’ collections for the reason that nineteenth century. They had been most lately held by the Gregoriano Profano Museum, which homes the Holy See’s collections of antiquities. A timeline for his or her precise return to Greece has but to be introduced.
Pope Francis visited Athens a 12 months in the past, the place he met with Ieronymos II and made a nighttime go to to the Parthenon. “Historical past makes its weight felt, and right here, at this time, I really feel the necessity to ask anew for the forgiveness of God and of our brothers and sisters for the errors dedicated by many Catholics,” the pope stated throughout his time in Athens, in line with the Catholic Information Company.
The Vatican’s repatriation of its Parthenon marbles comes as strain is mounting on the British Museum to return its holdings of the marbles, far and away the lion’s share of the fifth century BCE sculptures. Earlier this month it was revealed that secret talks between the British Museum and Greek officers appeared to be progressing, with a attainable deal to ship the marbles to the Acropolis Museum as early as subsequent 12 months.