The trustees of the british museum make the following statement on the museum website in response to arguments for the relocation of the parthenon marbles to the acropolis museum.
British museum marbles parthenon.
A british museum spokeswoman confirmed that it allows a stolen goods tour run by an external guide.
Ian jenkins the parthenon sculptures in the british museum british museum press 2007 ian jenkins greek architecture and its sculpture in the british museum british museum press 2006 mary beard the parthenon profile 2002 william st clair lord elgin and the marbles 3rd edition oxford university press 1998.
The parthenon was built as a temple dedicated to the goddess athena.
In 1801 a british nobleman stripped the parthenon of many of its sculptures and took them to england.
The parthenon marbles a major money making display at the british museum have been the subject of an ongoing dispute between greece and the uk.
The objects were removed from the parthenon at athens and from other ancient buildings and shipped to england by arrangement of thomas bruce 7th lord elgin who was british.
The british museum disagrees however claiming that the ancient marbles which are roughly half of a 160 metre frieze that adorned the fifth century bc parthenon temple were legally acquired by.
The 2 500 year old sculptures were illegally torn off the parthenon in the 1800s taken to england and sold to the museum in 1816 by lord elgin.
The temple s great size and lavish use of white marble was intended to show off.
It was the centrepiece of an ambitious building programme on the acropolis of athens.
She said the elgin marbles were acquired legally with the approval of the ottoman.
All of the sculptures from the parthenon are in the british museum.
Controversy over their acquisition by the british museum continues to this day.
About half of the sculptures from the parthenon are lost having been destroyed over the 2 500 years of the building s history.
The parthenon sculptures in the british museum.
Elgin marbles collection of ancient greek sculptures and architectural details in the british museum london where they are now called the parthenon sculptures.
The director of the british museum has provoked anger by suggesting the removal of the parthenon marbles from greece in the 19th century could be seen as a creative act.