[CPProt.net] Czech 'treasure' turns out to be a fake

MSN CPPnet (Ton Cremers) museum-security at museum-security.org
Thu Sep 15 07:12:18 CEST 2005


Czech 'treasure' turns out to be a fake 

    September 14 2005 at 10:44AM  
 
Prague - Czech archaeologists were left red-faced on Tuesday after it
emerged that a 10-centimetre-high statuette which they had claimed depicted
a 5th century Persian goddess was nothing but a five-year-old fake created
by a pensioner.

Archaeologist David Danicek hit international headlines last week after
announcing that he had found the "unique seal" earlier this month on the
same spot where he had earlier uncovered an ancient burial ground during his
research into the great Central European migrations of the 4th, 5th and 6th
centuries.

"It is a sitting or half-kneeling woman's figure in a long green coat with a
golden hook and probably a golden necklace who is hiding her face behind a
book. The lower part of the statue is decorated with an erotic motif,"
Danicek's colleague, Petr Charvat, an expert in oriental cultures, enthused
last week.

Danicek and Charvat speculated that the figure must have reached Central
Bohemia via trade routes or military contacts along the northern border of
the Roman Empire.

But 72-year-old Jiri Simunlek, a retired craftsman from the outskirts of
Prague, told journalists on Tuesday that the gypsum carving was actually
supposed to represent a "meditating nun".

It had been fashioned in 1968 using a mould that he had made from a figurine
left to him by his late brother, who had worked in a ceramics factory.

Simunlek had used the mould to make several statuettes for friends. Then,
five years ago, his grandchildren had tried to make their own copy, but when
the result proved unsatisfactory, he threw it into a council skip along with
some attic junk, he said. - Sapa-AFP 
 




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