11 Dec 2008 5:45pm - 6:45pm Fitzwilliam Museum, Seminar Room, Trumpington Street

Description

A Public Lecture by

Margaret Miles

(American School of Classical Studies, Athens; UC Irvine)

 

Still in the Aftermath of Waterloo

What happens to art in time of war? Who should own art? Under what circumstances should victors in war allow the defeated to keep their art and other cultural property?  Should the age-old idea of ‘to the victors go the spoils’ still be the common expectation in warfare?  These are old questions that go back to debates in antiquity.  The first legal case that dealt with these issues was Cicero’s prosecution of Gaius Verres for extortion in 70 BCE; because Verres was a rapacious collector of art, Cicero used the theme of art collection as a buttressing point in his case. In the modern era, critics of Napoleon’s looting of Italy used the Verrines for fuel and denounced Napoleon as a new Verres. Lord Elgin was accused by Lord Byron of being another Verres in his despoliation of the Parthenon, and raised public ire against the acquisition of the Elgin Marbles.  But in the Verrines, Cicero had held up as models for behavior the conquering Roman generals who did not loot art, and especially Scipio Aemilianus, conqueror of Carthage, who repatriated art that had been taken from Sicily by Carthaginians.  This ancient model of repatriation and abstention from plunder was discussed again in London newspapers in 1815, in the aftermath of Waterloo. 

Thanks to the decisions made by the Duke of Wellington, a modern precedent was set for repatriating plundered art to Italy and other countries that had been invaded by Napoleon.  That episode in turn helped to inspire the Lieber Code during the Civil War in the U.S., the legal basis for international agreements that exist today to protect cultural property in time of war. In turn, concerns about nationalism as a basis for cultural identity and for making claims about cultural property are being debated as foreign governments are asking for the return of their cultural artifacts now in American museums.  This lecture reviews the debate about the repatriations after Waterloo among the British involved in the decision. A fresh examination of their reasoning provides new light on current debates.
 

Margaret M. Miles is currently Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Classical Studies at the American School of Classical Studies, Athens (also Professor of Art History and Classics at the University of California, Irvine).  She is an archaeologist, specializing in Greek architecture and Greek religion.  She is the author of Agora XXXI:  The City Eleusinion (Princeton, 1998) and Art as Plunder: The Ancient Origins of Debate about Cultural Property (Cambridge, 2008), a study of the impact of Cicero's Verrines on early modern ideas about the fate of art in time of war.


Part of the 'Culture Wars: Heritage and Armed Conflict in the 21st century', 11-13 December 2008, more…

 

All welcome! No registration required. 

CENTRE FOR RESEARCH IN THE ARTS, SOCIAL SCIENCES AND HUMANITIES

Tel: +44 1223 766886
Email enquiries@crassh.cam.ac.uk