May 10, 2009

Roman artifact was returned 25 years after


Have you ever traveled to an historical place and taking out something with you? Well, that seems to be what happened more than 25 years ago with an American couple. As a matter of fact, this "interesting" story has even made the news in Italy! Read the msnbc.com article below for further detail on the story:

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ROME - Remorseful and anonymous, an American couple has mailed back a chunk of ancient Rome to Italian authorities about 25 years after their Roman holiday.

The tourists said in a letter tucked inside the package they mailed that they had picked up the fist-sized fragment of a slab of terracotta near the Colosseum.

But Rome's archaeological office said Thursday that the piece probably came from a bit farther away, the sprawling area of the Roman Forum or the ancient Palatine Hill.

The archaeological office, which examined the chunk, said even though the fragment didn't come from the Colosseum "the gesture of returning the piece by the U.S. couple is still important."

Much of Rome's historic center is littered with fragments of ancient stone and other artifacts.

In the letter, signed only "an American citizen," a woman writes that she and her husband picked up the fragment "as a spontaneous souvenir from nearby the Colosseum" on a trip about a quarter century ago.

"I have been bothered by the fact that we took something that did not belong to us and am now returning it. I have felt badly about it whenever I would see this rock sitting on our shelf among our other artifacts from trips taken over the years of our lives," the letter read.

It is a crime in Italy to illegally export ancient artifacts, and Rome has been cracking down on archaeological theft, including prosecuting art dealers suspected of clandestine trafficking in artifacts.

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