US museum hands back Ghana's looted royal artefacts

They include a gold necklace, an ornamental chair, two gold stool ornaments and two bracelets.

In Summary

• The items were handed over to the Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, during a ceremony on Thursday.

• They were repatriated from the Fowler Museum, based at the University of California in the US.

The returned artefacts have been part of the Fowler Museum's collection since 1965.
The returned artefacts have been part of the Fowler Museum's collection since 1965.
Image: AFP/BBC

The king of Ghana's traditional Asante kingdom - known as the Asantehene - has received seven royal artefacts that had been looted from the kingdom nearly 150 years ago.

The items were handed over to the Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, during a ceremony on Thursday, after they were repatriated from the Fowler Museum, based at the University of California in the US.

They include a gold necklace, an ornamental chair, two gold stool ornaments and two bracelets.

An elephant tail whisk, which “is a ceremonial piece that is held by someone of incredibly high status" was also returned, Erica P. Jones, the senior curator of African arts at Fowler Museum told Art Magazine.

The items have been hosted at Fowler Museum since 1965, but were looted by British forces from the Asantehene's Manhyia Palace in the city of Kumasi, southern Ghana, in 1874.

The return of the items comes less than two weeks after the UK's British Museum and Victoria and Albert Museum loaned back 32 items that had been looted from the kingdom, mostly in the 19th century.

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