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Monday, October 08, 2007

UPDATE ON THE UCL ARAMAIC INCANTATION BOWL COLLECTION:
British university forced to return 'looted' Iraq treasure
By Andrew Johnson (The Independent)
Published: 07 October 2007

One of Britain's leading universities is embroiled in an embarrassing row over hundreds of treasures looted from Iraq.

Found scattered around ancient Mesopotamia, the Aramaic incantation or devil bowls were placed upside down in homes during the sixth to eighth centuries to trap evil spirits. The spells, and information such as the names of the home owners, are not found in any other source. One collection contains the earliest examples of the Bible in Hebrew.
This is somewhat garbled. I've never heard them called "devil bowls" before, although I suppose they could be. Some of the names in the bowls are known from other sources (e.g., Rav Joshua bar Perahya, who also appears in rabbinic texts). And, although the bowls do quote passages from the Hebrew Bible from time to time, these bowls are not the earliest sources for the Hebrew Bible. Rather, the Dead Sea Scrolls are. [UPDATE: Actually, the very earliest fragment of a text found in the Hebrew Bible appears in the Ketef Hinnom silver amulets.]
Anther collection is at the centre of a legal row that has divided Britain's academic community. Since the first Gulf War in 1990, Iraq has been a looters' paradise. The United Nations introduced a sanction in 2003 making it illegal to handle artefacts from the country. So when University College London came into possession of 654 bowls, the biggest collection in the world, which it loaned from a private collector, suspicions were raised.

The bowls belong to Martin Schoyen, a Norwegian collector of ancient scripts. There is no suggestion that he looted the bowls, or was aware they may have been looted when he bought them in London from a Jordanian who claimed they had been in his family for generations.

UCL set up a committee of inquiry which found that "on the balance of probability" the bowls had, somewhere along the line, been looted from Iraq.

At this point Mr Schoyen sued UCL for their return. Legally his claim is sound, because he has held title for seven years. What has dismayed academics, however, is that the inquiry report was suppressed as part of the out-of-court settlement.

Professor Colin Renfrew, a fellow at Cambridge University and a member of UCL's committee of inquiry, is angry that the settlement said the report should be withheld. A world expert in ancient treasures, Lord Renfrew said UCL had no choice but to return the collection.

[...]
The situation sounds messy. For previous PaleoJudaica coverage, see here, here, and here. For some introductory comments on the Aramaic incantation bowls, go here.

By the way, my broadband access is still down at home, but I'm working on it.