Why Britain, Greece are quarreling over Parthenon sculptures

Greece’s government on Tuesday accused Britain of showing “a lack of respect” by abruptly cancelling a meeting between their leaders at short notice in a dispute over 2,500-year-old Parthenon sculptures brought to Britain in the 19th century.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak cancelled a planned wide-ranging meeting with his Greek counterpart Kyriakos Mitsotakis after the latter raised the decades-old demand for the return of the sculptures from the British Museum.

“It shows a lack of respect to the prime minister but also to the country he represents,” said Pavlos Marinakis, a spokesperson for the Greek government.

Members of the public walk around the Parthenon Galleries at the British Museum on Jan. 5 in London. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

Sunak’s decision to cancel the meeting was also criticized by some British opposition parties and a campaign group backed by British politicians from different parties who want to resolve the issue.

That group, the Parthenon Project, has proposed a deal that would see the sculptures reunified in Athens — without Britain and Greece needing to agree on who owns them.

“I don’t think the prime minister needed really to intervene in this way and it hasn’t particularly helped our relationships with Greece,” said Ed Vaizey, a former Conservative culture minister who advises the Parthenon Project.

Appearing on the BBC over the weekend, Mitsotakis compared the separation of the sculptures to cutting the Mona Lisa in half, a characterization rejected by British government.

Here’s more on the history of the dispute:

What are the sculptures?

The largest temple on the Acropolis, the Parthenon has operated as an archaeological site since 1833, surviving wars and natural disasters to become the symbol of modern Greece.

The sculptures at the British Museum make up about half of a 160-metre frieze that adorned the Parthenon temple on the rocky Acropolis hill in Athens. The collection includes 15 sculpted relief panels and figures of gods and heroes from the temple’s pediments.

They are original parts of the temple dedicated to the goddess Athena, completed in 432 BC as the crowning glory of Athens’ Golden Age.

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Why are they in Britain?

The sculptures, known as the Elgin Marbles in Britain, include part of a frieze, relief panels and other figures that were removed from the Parthenon in the early 19th century by Thomas Bruce, the 7th Earl of Elgin and then-British ambassador to the Ottoman empire.

They were transported to Britain and bought by the British Museum in 1816 and are exhibited as a prized part of its collection in London.

Since the late 1930s they’ve been housed at the museum in the Duveen Gallery, named after art dealer Sir Joseph Duveen.

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Greece’s stance

A man wearing black gloves, shown from behind, looks to affix a sculpture to a wall.
A curator holds one of three fragments of the Parthenon, during a ceremony at the Acropolis Museum in Athens on March 24, after Pope Francis returned to Greece three fragments of Athens’s Parthenon temple, in what the Vatican called a gesture of friendship. (Angelos Tzortzinis/AFP/Getty Images)

While Athens has called for the permanent return of the treasures since its independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1832 and accused Elgin of theft, the campaign garnered more attention in the 1980s.

Greek Oscar-nominated actress Melina Mercouri, a vocal supporter of the arts, launched an official campaign for their return when she was culture minister in 1981-1989.

Athens has further stepped up its efforts since it opened a museum in 2009 at the foot of the Acropolis, which holds the sculptures that remain in Greece. With a view of the Parthenon, the layout of the top floor of the museum mimics the temple.

In September 2019, Mitsotakis suggested Athens would be willing to loan antiquities to the British Museum in return for being able to temporarily exhibit them. Greece said the proposal did not alter its long-standing demand for their permanent return.

The British Museum position

Several people are shown from behind looking at a large museum wall
The Parthenon Marbles are located in the Duveen Gallery at the British Museum. (Daniel Leal/AFP/Getty Images)

The British Museum, custodian of the sculptures, has refused to return them, saying they were acquired by Elgin under a legal contract with the Ottoman Empire that then ruled Greece.

The trustees of the museum say the public would benefit more from having the sculptures divided between two museums, that bringing them back together into a unified whole is impossible as some parts were lost or destroyed, and that the sculptures could not be safely returned.

The trustees have said they would consider a loan to Greece if Greece acknowledges the British Museum’s ownership of the sculptures, which Greek governments have refused in the past.

Such disputes are not unprecedented

A massive stone statue is shown indoors in a building.
Hoa Hakananai’a, a Moai stone figure from Rapa Nui, is shown at the British Museum in London on Jan. 25. (Toby Melville/Reuters)

In January 2022, a museum in Italy loaned Athens the so-called “Fagan” fragment, depicting the foot of the ancient Greek goddess Artemis. It later said the fragment — part of the temple’s eastern frieze — could stay in Greece.

Earlier this year, the Vatican returned to Greece three pieces of the Parthenon that had been in the papal collections of the Vatican Museums for more than a century.

The British Museum also houses, among other artifacts, two large stone moai statues — Hoa Hakananai’a and Moai Hava — taken by British ship in the 19th century from Easter Island, also known as Rapa Nui. Chile, which later annexed Easter Island in the Pacific, has requested their return.

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