Saturday 4 May 2024

Costa Rica ‘More Complete’ After Recovering 200 Artifacts From Venezuela

Paying the bills

Latest

Ovsicori: Rincón de la Vieja “has conditions” for an eruption

QCOSTARICA -- The Observatorio Vulcanológico y Sismológico de Costa...

Higher fuel prices next week: see the new prices

QCOSTARICA -- Even though the dollar exchange rate has...

Yokasta Valle’s revenge: Golden opportunity for tourism and commerce

QCOSTARICA - Back in 2013, Costa Rican men's national...

PUSC became the big loser of May 1st

QCOSTARICA -- In alliance with the government, PUSC aspired...

How To Identify The Best CBD Vape Juice Vendor This Season?

The CBD product landscape is ever-expanding, therefore making it...

Hot mornings and afternoon showers typical during the transition to the rainy season

QCOSTARICA -- The weather service, the Instituto Meteorológico Nacional...

Dollar Exchange

¢503.94 BUY

¢511.51 SELL

04 May 2024 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR

Paying the bills

Share

Costa Rica said it is “more complete” after recovering nearly 200 pre-Columbian artifacts from Venezuela, where they had been amassed by a wealthy Estonian art collector.

The figurines include representations of warriors and animals, along with hand-crafted spheres and grinding stones made by indigenous people who had lived in Costa Rica for thousands of years. MAYELA LOPEZ, AFP/File

The handover of the 196 stone and ceramic figurines to the National Museum in Costa Rica on Wednesday marked the biggest-ever return of archeological items to the Central American country.

The figurines included representations of warriors and animals, as well as hand-crafted spheres and grinding stones made by indigenous people who had lived in different parts of Costa Rica for thousands of years before Christopher Columbus arrived in 1502.

- Advertisement -

The head of the museum’s heritage protection department, Marlin Calvo, told a news conference that the artifacts had been taken out of the country via “illicit trafficking.”

They ended up in the possession of Harry Mannil, an Estonian businessman who settled for most of his life in Venezuela and who died in Costa Rica in 2010.

Mannil’s Caracas house operated as a private museum, displaying the many works of pre-Columbian and South American indigenous art he had accumulated.

The pieces returned to Costa Rica were seized by Venezuelan authorities between 2009 and 2014. Mannil had tried to transfer some of them to the United States but was stopped by Venezuela’s customs service.

Venezuela shipped them out on December 24 and they arrived in Costa Rica on January 2 ahead of the formal delivery to the National Museum.

“Today, Costa Rica is more complete,” President Luis Guillermo Solis told the news conference.

- Advertisement -

“Today, the country, with the return of these nearly 200 items from our heritage, is complemented, is filled up with a part of ourselves that wasn’t with us,” he said.

Solis added the artifacts had “suffered so many humiliations in the hands of those who had illegally grabbed this important part of our history,” and called on the National Museum to display them in a special section.

- Advertisement -
Paying the bills
Q Costa Rica
Q Costa Rica
Reports by QCR staff

Related Articles

Subscribe to our stories

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.

Discover more from Q COSTA RICA

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading