India requests U.K. museum for ancient idol stolen from Tamil Nadu temple

The statue of Saint Tirumankai Alvar was acquired by the Ashmolean Museum at the University of Oxford from the Sotheby’s auction house in 1967

February 24, 2020 05:21 pm | Updated 05:21 pm IST - London

India has made a formal request for the return of a 15th century bronze idol of a Tamil saint believed to be stolen from a temple in Tamil Nadu and currently at a U.K. museum at Oxford University after it was sold to it during an auction.

The statue of Saint Tirumankai Alvar was acquired by the Ashmolean Museum at the University of Oxford from the Sotheby’s auction house in 1967, from the collection of a collector named J.R. Belmont (1886-1981).

The museum said it was alerted to the origins of the ancient statue by an independent researcher in November last year, following which it alerted the Indian High Commission.

“Research in the photo archives of the IFP-EFEO [Institut Francais de Pondichery and the Ecole francaise d’Extreme-Orient] appears to show the same bronze in the temple of Shri Soundarrajaperumal Kovil in Tamil Nadu in 1957,” a statement from the Ashmolean Museum said on Monday.

“The Ashmolean was informed that the bronze is one of a number of bronzes in collections in Europe and the United States identified by this researcher through the IFP-EFEO archive,” the statement said.

Although there was no claim against the object, the museum officially brought the matter to the attention of the Indian High Commission on December 16 last year, requesting further information, including possible police records, that would help them establish the work’s provenance.

“We were open to holding further discussions around the possible repatriation of the sculpture,” the museum said.

Indian High Commissioner in the U.K. Ruchi Ghanashyam acknowledged the “proactive” move of the museum soon after and the matter was forwarded to the Indian authorities for follow up, with a formal request for the restitution of the idol sent to the museum earlier this month.

“In our request, we have stated that the police report furnished by the idol wing unambiguously shows that the original idol as is found in the IFP archives has been stolen and replaced with a fake one and that the stolen idol is the same one that is presently with the Ashmolean,” said Rahul Nangare, First Secretary (Trade) at the Indian High Commission in London.

“After we provided the police report along with the formal request for restitution, Ashmolean have informed that they are now carrying out further due diligence with an official [from Ashmolean] also scheduled to visit India shortly. We have requested them to expedite the same so that the final decision is taken at the earliest,” he said.

The museum, which holds some of the world’s most famous art and archaeology artefacts, said it acquired the statue in “good faith” in 1967.

“We currently have no indication of how the bronze entered his [Belmont] collection and we are continuing to investigate with the support of the Indian High Commission,” the museum said.

There have been a number of instances of stolen Indian artefacts being restored from the U.K. to India, most recently in August last year when a limestone carved relief sculpture, originating from Andhra Pradesh, and a Navaneetha Krishna bronze sculpture originating from 17th century Tamil Nadu, were handed over to the Indian High Commissioner to the U.K., following a joint U.S.-U.K. investigation involving Scotland Yard’s Art and Antiques Unit.

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