However, I had forgotten one of the most fundamental moral rules, one that I had been taught from when I first began to …show more content…
All the artifacts, in all the museums that I have been to, had a home. A home in a different country, with a different culture, with different sets of eyes to gaze upon them and relate to them. A home that they should be returned to. The remarkable relics need to be …show more content…
The Parthenon Marbles, known in Britain as the Elgin Marbles, were originally located on the islands of Greece. Whilst in Athens, in 1805, Lord Elgin stole the Parthenon Marbles and took them back to England, renaming them the Elgin Marbles. In recent times, Greece has reiterated that the marbles were taken illegally and that they ought to be returned to their rightful home, creating high tensions between Great Britain and Greece, which is evident in their communications over the artifacts. Elana Korka, an official of the Greek Culture Ministry, explains, both in a brief and simple manner that “they are the Parthenon Marbles and that is where they belong.” This logic can be applied to any number of artifacts being returned to their own culture, or in fact not being