Italy recovers artefacts dug up by ‘amateurish’ tomb raiders

Published November 20, 2024 Updated November 20, 2024 07:52am
POLICE present recovered Etruscan archaeological artefacts in Rome, on Tuesday.—Reuters
POLICE present recovered Etruscan archaeological artefacts in Rome, on Tuesday.—Reuters

ROME: Italian authorities have recovered precious 3rd century BC artefacts from an Etruscan necropolis looted by a couple of bungling tomb raiders in Umbria who stumbled across the haul on their land.

The Etruscans flourished in central Italy around 2,500 years ago but were gradually assimilated into the Roman empire. They left behind lavish tombs, pottery and statues but tantalisingly few written documents and patchy evidence of their daily lives.

The artefacts, including eight urns, two sarcophagi and beauty accessories such as bronze mirrors and a perfume bottle still redolent of its original scent, are worth at least 8 million euros, Carabinieri art police said. They were found in Citta della Pieve, about 150 kilometres (90 miles) north of Rome.

One sarcophagus contained the full skeleton of a woman in her 40s, while the urns were finely decorated with scenes from Greek mythology and female figures with still visible red paint on their lips and gold colouring on their jewels.

Police seized the loot from two entrepreneurs who had unearthed Etruscan burial chambers while excavating land they owned, Perugia Chief Prosecutor Raffaele Cantone told a press conference on Tuesday.

They “had nothing to do with the world of (practised) tomb raiders” and were “clumsy” and “amateurish” in the way they tried to access the black market for looted art, the prosecutor said.

The Carabinieri caught up with them after they posted pictures of their discovery on the internet in the hope of finding buyers, triggering investigations that included phone wiretaps, stakeouts and air surveillance drones. Police finally swooped on the suspects after one of them posted on Facebook a picture of himself with a looted artefact, Cantone said.

Published in Dawn, November 20th, 2024

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