Source: Bloomberg Businessweek By Catherine Hickley Frescos, mosaics and icons looted from churches, museums and monasteries in Northern Cyprus and seized by police in Munich 16 years ago were today handed over to the Cypriot government. The artifacts were discovered in the Munich apartment of Aydin Dikmen, a Turkish-born art dealer, in 1997. Then valued at 30 million deutsche marks ($17 million), they included a mosaic hacked from the wall of the 6th-century Kanakaria church and a fresco from the medieval Antiphonitis Church. After years of legal wrangling, a Munich court determined in March that 173 of the seized artworks…
Trending
- #Giving Tuesday – Support Orthodox Christian Laity!
- Together We Thrive: OCL Annual Conference & Year-End Giving Campaign
- Archon Officers Participate in Historic Pilgrimage to Nicaea
- Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and Pope Leo recite the Creed together during 1700th Anniversary of Nicaea
- Mission Center Board Convenes
- The “Orthodoxy as Masculinity” Narrative
- Walk with Us: Orthodox Volunteer Corps (OVC)
- St. John Chrysostom’s Legacy: From Antioch to America