US man returns antiquities to Italy after reading Guardian report on looted relics

Jay Stanley hands over 30 artefacts, including vases and figurines from 6th to 3rd centuries BC, found in late father’s home

An American man has returned 30 antiquities to Italy after reading a Guardian report about a compatriot who sent 19 antiquities back to their countries of origin amid growing coverage of looted ancient artefacts.

Jay Stanley, who lives in Ben Lomond, California, has handed over vases and figurines dating from the 6th to 3rd centuries BC.

He came across them in a cupboard at the home of his father, John, who died last October. They brought back childhood memories of growing up in Italy: his father was a music teacher and his mother a school librarian, and they lived for 10 years in Naples.

Stanley, a database engineer for an AI startup, has no idea where the antiquities were acquired but suggested they may have been from one of Naples’s open-air markets.

His parents were always taking him to museums, inspiring his passion for history and archaeology, and he realises now that the antiquities may have come from illicit excavations originally as they had no collecting history. He said: “It was in the back of my mind: what am I going to do with these things?”

Stanley found answers in a Guardian article about John Gomperts, from Washington, who last year gave up ancient artefacts he had inherited from his grandmother. Those pieces also had no collecting history, and Gomperts had been concerned about the implications of having potentially looted antiquities in his possession.

He saw the need – both legally and ethically – to return the objects to Italy, Greece, Cyprus and Pakistan respectively in taking the advice of Prof Christos Tsirogiannis, a former senior field archaeologist at the University of Cambridge.

Gomperts had initially turned to Tsirogiannis after seeing his name in an earlier Guardian report about a Roman sculpture that was being auctioned despite its link to a dealer involved with the illicit trade.

Based in Cambridge, Tsirogiannis heads illicit antiquities trafficking research for the Unesco chair on threats to cultural heritage at the Ionian University in Corfu, Greece. Over 17 years, he has identified 1,663 looted objects within auction houses, commercial galleries, private collections and museums, alerting police authorities and governments and helping to repatriate items.

In 2018, for example, Sotheby’s in New York was offering an ancient Greek bronze horse, but Tsirogiannis identified through photographic evidence its links to a disgraced British antiquities dealer. In 2020, Sotheby’s lost its legal challenge and Greece’s culture minister described the court’s ruling as a victory for countries seeking to reclaim antiquities.

Tsirogiannis said of Stanley’s antiquities: “These are 6th to 3rd centuries BC Greek, but from various areas around Italy. I advised him that unprovenanced antiquities of Italian origin should be returned to Italy. He had found out from the Guardian about the Gomperts case, he reached out seeking advice and wanted to return his antiquities.”

He added that although Stanley’s antiquities were not exceptional objects, the principle of returning them was significant. He praised both men for setting an extraordinary example to other owners of unprovenanced antiquities.

Stanley urged other owners to follow his example: “My conscience is clear. That’s the big payoff.”

Asked how his father would feel, he said: “He would completely agree. I’m sure he didn’t realise that they were as old as they are. After Christos mentioned that they’re 2,000 to 3,000 years old, I thought: wow.”

He carefully packaged up the antiquities and delivered them to the Italian embassy in Washington DC, which has thanked both Tsirogiannis and Stanley, writing to the latter: “We are very grateful for your offer to return the pieces to the Italian government for preservation and conservation. We received the pictures which were useful to assess their state of conservation and provenance in order to plan for their future repatriation.”

Contributor

Dalya Alberge

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Man repatriates 19 antiquities after reading Guardian article
Exclusive: John Gomperts returned ancient objects worth up to £80,000 he had inherited from his grandmother

Dalya Alberge

11, Nov, 2022 @6:00 AM

Article image
Allegedly looted antiquities on sale at London Frieze Masters art fair
Ancient Greek vases identified as having once been in possession of convicted dealer Gianfranco Becchina

Howard Swains

22, Oct, 2017 @5:03 PM

Article image
Irish woman inspired to return African and Aboriginal antiquities by Guardian article
Isabella Walsh has contacted embassies and consulates to repatriate 10 objects that her father wanted to be returned

Dalya Alberge

12, Nov, 2023 @3:00 PM

Article image
Three sections of Roman wall in City of London given protected status
Remains of once vast riverside structure granted legal protection against unauthorised change

Esther Addley

03, May, 2023 @5:00 AM

Article image
US begins returning $10m of antiquities stolen from Italy
Investigation recovers 200 artefacts including statue unwittingly bought by reality TV star Kim Kardashian West

Angela Giuffrida

16, Dec, 2021 @4:08 PM

Article image
Italy and US in antiquities deal

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York yesterday clinched a landmark deal with Italy to return a 2,500-year-old vase and other allegedly looted treasures in return for the loan of items of "equivalent importance and beauty".

John Hooper in Rome

22, Feb, 2006 @11:57 PM

Article image
Looted Iraqi antiquities return home after UK experts crack cold case
British Museum traces exact origin of treasures, brought to London after Saddam Hussein’s fall

Maev Kennedy

09, Aug, 2018 @9:00 AM

Article image
Neglected ruins of Pompeii declared a 'disgrace to Italy'
This week Pompeii's House of Gladiators collapsed – and the rest of the extraordinary ancient city is in a perilous state

In pictures: Pompeii's ruins

Esther Addley

11, Nov, 2010 @9:59 PM

Article image
Create UN force to protect ancient heritage from Isis, says Italy
World’s archaeological heritage needs protection by UN ‘blue helmets of culture’ force akin to peacekeepers, says culture minister Dario Franceschini

Rosie Scammell

19, Mar, 2015 @6:03 PM

Article image
US woman returns ancient Roman marble with letter of apology
Museum receives package from woman seeking forgiveness over graffitied artefact

Angela Giuffrida in Rome

25, Nov, 2020 @1:50 PM