Sunday, July 08, 2018 -
Antiquities; Looting; Smuggling; Collecting;,illicit antiquities,illicit trade in antiquities,Italy,Sicily
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On the trail of looted antiquities, Carabinieri arrest another individual in Sicily.
Image Credit: Carabinieri |
An ancient amphora and 25 terracotta fragments of ancient statues, some believed to date as far back as the III millennium BCE (the Early to Middle Bronze Age), these are the plundered archaeological finds seized during a 04 July 2018 raid on the home of Gianni Francesco Scimemi in his home in Salemi, a village located in the Belice Valley within the interior of Western Sicily.
Led by the Carabinieri Comando Compagnia Mazara del Vallo under the authority of commander, Lieutenant Maurizio Giaramita, Italian authorities also found the man to be in the possession of a handgun in which the factory-marked serial number had been completely abraded.
The area around Salemi is rich in archaeological material. Excavation and study of the historic remains in this region have provided crucial evidence regarding the ancient Elymian town of Halikyai. The Elymi occupied various hilltops of western Sicilduring the Archaic (c. 700 – 480 BCE), Early Classical (480 – 400 BCE), Late Classical (400 – 323 BCE), and Hellenistic (323 – 30 BCE) periods.
The ancient Greek historian Herodotus once wrote that the indigenous Sicilians who inhabited this zone were fiercely culturally independent despite their interaction with the Greeks and Phoenicians. But the origins of these pieces are unknown as they have been excavated without any care for the archaeological context.
For the moment Scimemi remains "free", confined to house arrest pending the completion of this investigation.
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