'Law: Illicit Antiquities', in D. Pearsall (ed.), Encyclopaedia of Archaeology

Articles
Thème de la ressource: 
Pillage d'objets archéologiques
Type de ressource: 
Bibliographie - Articles
Auteur: 
BRODIE Neil
Editeur: 
Oxford: Elsevier
Date: 
2008
Pages / Longueur: 
7 p.
Langue de publication: 
Anglais

An illicitly traded archaeological artifact (illicit antiquity) is one that has at sometime been traded in contravention of national or international legal regulations.
Typically, it will have been removed illegally from an archaeological site or monument, and/or exported illegally from its country of origin. Possibly, it will have been stolen from a museum or other cultural institution, or from a private owner (see Antiquities, Looting and Buying of (00014)). The act of removal is normally unrecorded and probably destructive. Illicit antiquities are often sold by reputable vendors without any public indication of ownership history (provenance).