客服中心 | 代理专区 | 网站地图 | 公司简介
当前位置:亿城英语 -> 英语听力大全 -> VOA标准英语 -> 2005 -> 文化教育(1) -> 在FBI的帮助下,伊克古文物重回家乡


 

Ancient Iraqi Relics Find Their Way Home with

Help from the FBI

在FBI的帮助下,伊克古文物重回家乡

 

As Operation Iraqi Freedom rolled through Baghdad in the spring of 2003, an estimated 15,000 artifacts disappeared from the country's museums and archaeological sites. Many were hidden by museum curators and staff. Others were taken by looters only to appear on the international black market, or as souvenirs offered for sale to coalition troops. Now, some of those stolen antiquities are returning home.

 

Last month, the Federal Bureau of Investigation announced its first recovery of looted cultural property from Iraq: 8 ancient Babylonian seals, 4,000 to 5,000 years old. A U.S. soldier purchased the tiny stone cylinders -- each smaller than a child's thumb -- as souvenirs before leaving Iraq. But when he got home he had a feeling the artifacts were more valuable than he originally thought. And says FBI Special Agent John Eckenrode, he was right.

 

John Eckenrode: Upon his return home, the soldier showed these to an archaeology professor who informed him they were real and that it was illegal to remove them from Iraq. He immediately expressed his desire to give them to the proper authorities so that they could be returned to the people of Iraq.

 

The soldier paid $300 for the seals. Their market value is 100 times that amount. Archeologist Richard Zettler says it's impossible to calculate their value to scholars of the ancient world.

 

Richard Zettler: Cylinder seals are actually small stone or shell cylinders with incised designs on them that were rolled on malleable material to make a raised, relief narrative. They were used in antiquity to impress on lumps of clay that were used to secure doors, bags, boxes, other types of containers to keep them accessible only to authorized persons. They were also rolled on clay tablets to document the authenticity of the text. So they were one of the really first administrative and legal technologies that the ancient peoples of Mesopotamia employed.

 

Mr. Zettler, who participated in many digs in Iraq in the 1970's, says cylinder seals were used on a daily basis in the Babylonian communities along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers.

 

The recovered seals were repatriated in a simple ceremony last month at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archeology and Anthropology. Said Ahmad, a member of the Iraqi mission to the United Nations, accepted the antiquities on behalf of his government.

 

Ahmad: We are thankful for all the people from the FBI and Pennsylvanian professors and the museum and even the soldier [who brought] the articles to the museum and decided to return [them] back to [their] proper country, which is Iraq. Thank you very much.

 

But before being returned home, Mr. Ahmad said the seals will be displayed at the archaeology museum.

 

Since the war in Iraq began, there has been an alarming increase in the number of antiquities stolen by syndicates of organized art thieves. According to the FBI, many of those relics end up in the United States, part of a black market that traffics in $5- to $8-billion worth of art treasures each year.

 

Given the severity of the problem, last year the FBI created the Art Crime Team (ACT). The Bureau's Debra Pierce says it is dedicated to recovering the world's stolen artwork.

 

Debra Pierce: This is a multi-national and multi-international agency effort. And FBI's ACT art crime teams joins France, England, Italy and Spain with their art crime teams to address these problems more effectively.

 

With this increased cooperation among international authorities and awareness by those who might find antiquities for sale, the hope is that more of Iraq's stolen cultural heritage will come home.

 

I’m Stasia Demarco in Philadelphia.

 

注释:

artifacts [5B:tifAkts] n. 史前古器物

archaeological [7B:kiE5lCdVikEl] adj. 考古学的,考古学上的

curator [kjuE5reitE] n. 馆长

looter 掠夺者,抢劫者

souvenir [5su:vEniE] n. 纪念品

antiquity [An5tikwiti] n. 古代的遗物

Babylonian [7bAbi5lEJnjEn] adj. 巴比伦的

incised [in5saizd] adj. 雕刻的

malleable [5mAliEbl] adj. 有延展性的

Mesopotamia [7mesEupE5teimjE] n. 美索不达米亚(西南亚地区)



声明:
这里只提供从网络公开资源收集的低精度英语听力和英语口语语音试听,完全免费供广大英语爱好者试用。我们不保证文章内容一定是完整和正确的。您如需要完整和高精度的语音产品,请在相应的音像书店购买正版产品和教材。除标明的外,这里的语音内容的版权属于原版权所有人。如果试学感觉好,请支持正版!英语听力部分页面可能缺少文本或者语音,请反馈到客服信箱;文字内容仅供英语学习者参考,英语听力音频内容仅供低精度在线试听(不提供下载)。若您打开页面后看不到Realplayer播放框,有可能是没有安装Realplayer播放器,请点这里下载并安装。





北京数码轻舟科技发展有限公司版权所有 ICP京050055号 客服电话:(010)62535917
地址:北京市海淀区成府路35号北楼119室 邮编:100083 传真:(010)62535917
联系我们: 客服邮箱: