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Peru plans to sue Yale for artifacts |
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Written by Xiuhcoatl
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Dec 01, 2005 at 04:58 PM |
Peru plans to sue Yale for artifacts
Seeks to retrieve relics taken from Machu Picchu
By Rick Vecchio, Associated Press
December 1, 2005
LIMA -- Peru is preparing a lawsuit against Yale University to retrieve
artifacts taken nearly a century ago from the Inca citadel of Machu
Picchu, a Peruvian cultural official said yesterday.
Peru in recent years has held discussions with Yale seeking the return
of nearly 5,000 artifacts, including ceramics and human bones that
explorer Hiram Bingham dug up during three expeditions to Machu Picchu
in 1911, 1912 and 1914.
''Yale considers the collection university property, given the amount
of time it has been there," said Luis Guillermo Lumbreras, chief of
Peru's National Institute of Culture, in an interview with The
Associated Press.
''This is something we do not recognize because the pieces were legally
granted in a temporary loan," he said. ''That is the reason it will be
necessary to air this in the courts and no longer simply on the level
of diplomatic conversations."
Peru's Foreign Ministry was preparing the legal case and would likely
present it in Connecticut state court, Lumbreras said, adding that it
was not clear when the lawsuit would be filed.
Richard Burger, chairman and director of graduate studies at Yale's
Council on Archaeological Studies, did not immediately return telephone
messages seeking comment.
Tom Conroy, a spokesman for the university, said he was looking into
Peru's assertion that the artifacts were on loan but did not
immediately have an answer.
Bingham's grandson, David Bingham of Salem, Conn., said he never heard
of any promise to return the artifacts and said Yale has been a good
caretaker.
''Yale has taken very good care of the stuff and it probably brought
more visitors to Peru than almost any other thing because the exhibits
at Yale are so famous," he said.
But Bingham said there's no reason Yale and Peru shouldn't be able
compromise, assuming the country can guarantee the preservation of the
artifacts. He said there are enough items to create displays in both
places.
''There's enough interest where you could have a permanent exhibit in
Peru, on loan from Yale, but there would be somebody who would be
responsible for it," he said.
''It seems to me there's certainly a place for that to happen. But it
would be a disaster if a lot of stuff got shipped down there and wasn't
properly cared for."
Lumbreras said former President Augusto B. Leguia gave Bingham
''permission to temporarily export the objects for scientific ends,"
with the agreement that the artifacts would be returned after one year,
and that the timeframe was later extended by 18 months.
''Theoretically, they should have been returned after Jan. 27, 1916," Lumbreras said. ''The fact is, they weren't returned."
For decades, Peru did not pursue the matter, he said.
''It stayed that way for nearly 100 years," Lumbreras said. ''We believe it is time to return the collection."
The Incas ruled Peru from the 1430s until the arrival of the Spaniards
in 1532, constructing incredible stone-block cities and roads and
developing a highly organized society that extended from modern-day
Colombia to Chile.
The reconstructed ruins at Machu Picchu, located on a craggy
mountaintop above a lush valley about 310 miles southeast of Lima, are
Peru's top tourist attraction.
Bingham, the first foreigner to reach Machu Picchu, had multiple
theories about it: that it was perhaps a religious estate, inhabited
mostly by women, or maybe a last Inca stronghold that was abandoned as
the Spanish invaded. Or perhaps the Inca's city of origin.
Experts now say that Bingham was wrong on all counts. Machu Picchu was
a summer estate for royalty, a sort of Camp David for the Inca ruler
Pachacuti, Yale's Burger told the Associated Press in 2003. About 600
people, mostly royalty and their servants, are believed to have lived
there during the summers.
After his explorations, Bingham turned to politics. He served one day
as Connecticut governor in 1925 before resigning to take a seat in
Congress.
© Copyright 2005 Globe Newspaper Company.
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