Roman statue returns to Ankara at last
Statue is over 2,000 years old. Photo: File
A bronze statue of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius, smuggled out of Türkiye more than six decades ago, has returned home and will be unveiled as the centerpiece of "The Golden Age of Archaeology" exhibition, opening on August 6 at the Presidential Complex in Ankara.
The nearly 2,000-year-old statue will be displayed for the first time in Türkiye as part of a six-month exhibition featuring over 150 rare artefacts, more than 80 per cent of which have never been publicly shown.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is expected to inaugurate the exhibition, which coincides with a three-day international symposium in the capital, hosting more than 250 scholars, including 29 international participants and 33 academic speakers.
Culture and Tourism Minister Mehmet Nuri Ersoy, commenting on the event Sunday via social media, said the return of artefacts and the exhibition represent more than a historic reunion.
"The silent legacy of history buried beneath the soil has now become one of Türkiye's most powerful tools of diplomacy," he wrote, adding that the initiative reflects "a strategic vision shaping Türkiye's cultural future."
The statue, dated to the 2nd3rd century AD, had been trafficked out of Türkiye in the 1960s and later entered the collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art in Ohio. Depicting the emperor as a philosopher, it is considered one of Anatolia's finest examples of bronze sculpture.
Following efforts by Türkiye's Culture and Tourism Ministry, in cooperation with the Manhattan District Attorney's Office and US Homeland Security Investigations, the statue was formally returned in April during a ceremony held at the museum.
The return marks one of Türkiye's highest-profile recoveries of cultural heritage in recent years.
The exhibition will present a broad range of ancient pieces from across Türkiye. Notable items include a Neolithic-era bowl from Karahantepe, a 3,500-year-old clay tablet from Hatay, a 1,000-year-old perfume bottle set from Antalya, the Skylla Head from Laodikeia, a silver coin of Orhan Gazi from Karacahisar, a sphinx from Gordion, and a Roman-era Kybele statue. Andalou