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German Museum's Chinese Warriors Under Investigation

Reuters
Dec 13, 2007

SCULPTURES IN QUESTION: Thomas Hafermann, director of the exhibition 'Power in Death-The Terracotta Army of the First Emperor of China', cleans the head of a terracotta warrior November 2007 at the Museum of Ethnology in Hamburg, northern Germany. The museum was forced to warn visitors that eight ancient Chinese terracotta soldiers in the crowd-pulling exhibition may be fake after an art dealer instigated a police probe into their provenance. (Roland Magunia/AFP/Getty Images)
SCULPTURES IN QUESTION: Thomas Hafermann, director of the exhibition 'Power in Death-The Terracotta Army of the First Emperor of China', cleans the head of a terracotta warrior November 2007 at the Museum of Ethnology in Hamburg, northern Germany. The museum was forced to warn visitors that eight ancient Chinese terracotta soldiers in the crowd-pulling exhibition may be fake after an art dealer instigated a police probe into their provenance. (Roland Magunia/AFP/Getty Images)

BERLIN—German police are investigating whether ancient Chinese terracotta warriors that form a museum's newly-opened exhibition are fake.

The Hamburg Museum of Ethnology is offering refunds to about 10,000 visitors who have already viewed the "Power in Death" exhibition since it opened on Nov. 25, pending an outcome to the probe.

The display of eight clay warrior figures, two horses and 60 smaller objects will remain open—with a sign stating its authenticity is disputed—until a panel of Chinese experts arrive to review the figures later this week, museum spokeswoman Marina Lifschitz said.

Detectives are looking into whether fraud or copyright infringement has occurred.

German media reported earlier this week that officials from Xi'an, home of the 2,000-year-old clay funerary army, said the museum's figures had to be copies. Chinese officials were quoted saying they were not aware of original figures on loan in Germany.

Lifschitz said Hamburg museum authorities believed the figures were real because they had asked their partner in the exhibition to provide artifacts reconstructed from pieces found at the Xi'an site.

A spokesman for the museum's partner, the Center of Chinese Art and Culture in Markkleeberg, near Leipzig, said the figures had been obtained from public authorities, institutes and businesses in China. Their Chinese partners did not say the figures were real, he said.

"There was never a word about originals in the Hamburg contract," CCAC spokesman Yolna Grimm said. Unearthed about 30 years ago by a farmer digging a well, the Terracotta Army comes from the tomb of Emperor Qin Shihuangdi who spent over 20 years laying the foundations of modern China before dying in 210 BC.

The biggest overseas loan by the Chinese museum housing figures is currently at the British Museum in London, whose "First Emperor" exhibition contains 120 artifacts, including 20 life-size warriors.



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