The Quimbaya treasure is one of the most emblematic collections of pre-Hispanic goldsmithing. It is a window into Colombia’s remote past, and also the subject of a recent dispute.
On May 9, the government of Colombia asked the government of Spain to return to the country this collection of pre-Columbian pieces known as the Quimbaya treasure.
A letter signed by the Colombian Minister of Culture, Juan David Correa, and the Foreign Minister, Luis Gilberto Murillo, argues that the return of the pieces to Colombia would vindicate the cultural sovereignty of the country and would be in line with the policy of “decolonization of museums.” ” which the Spanish government announced in January of this year.
BBC Mundo contacted the Spanish government to request their comments on the Colombian petition, but did not receive a response.
The treasure that currently rests in the Museum of America in Madrid is made up of 122 pieces of metalwork (gold and gold and copper alloys) dating from between the 4th and 7th centuries.
The collection was gifted in 1893 to the then Queen Regent of Spain, María Cristina de Habsburgo-Lorena, by the Colombian president at that time, Carlos Holguín Mallarino.
Holguín himself, in the letter in which he offered the donation to the crown, described the collection as “the most complete and valuable, all of the finest gold, of the industry of the aborigines of Colombia.”
The reason for the donation was “as a token of our gratitude for the service he provided us by serving as arbitrator in our dispute with Venezuela over border delimitation,” according to a document from 1891.
132 years later, Colombia claims the Quimbaya treasure, after the Constitutional Court concluded that the gift was made illegally.
“The return would mean something symbolically very important, an act of historical reparation with the native peoples of this country,” the Colombian Minister of Culture stated for BBC Mundo.
The Quimbaya treasure was found by local guaqueros in 1890 in two pre-Columbian tombs in the municipality of Filandia, department of Quindío.
According to archaeologists, guaquería – that is, the search for pre-Hispanic treasures for economic purposes – was by then a business that numerous families in Colombia were engaged in.
It was even protected by law, which established that all gold, silver and precious stones found belonged to whoever discovered them.
The 122 pieces that are preserved in Madrid today are less than a third of all those found in the tombs of Filandia, which included not only metalwork, but also ceramics, stones and textiles.
The pieces correspond, according to archaeologists, to the classic or early Quimbaya period, meaning that they come from cultures much earlier than those found by the Spanish in the region in the 16th century.
Another 74 pieces from the collection are in a museum in Chicago, USA. And the whereabouts of several hundred more pieces from the treasure are not known with certainty.
The discovery of the Quimbaya treasure was described at the time as “majestic” and “filled the pages of the Colombian press,” according to documents from the archive of the Bank of the Republic.
The headlines of the time described it as a discovery of “priceless and fabulous value” and since then highlighted not only its economic value but also its historical and artistic value.
Archaeologist Ana Verde, co-author of the book “The Quimbaya Treasure”, agrees that “this discovery must have been quite unusual and extraordinary and undoubtedly exceeded the expectations of the huaqueros, merchants and collectors of the time.”
After their discovery, the pieces aroused great interest among dealers and collectors, and were dispersed among many owners.
But in August 1891, the Colombian government purchased the entire collection, then consisting of 433 objects, with the intention of taking it to a large exhibition that was being prepared in Madrid for the fourth centenary of the arrival of the Spanish to America.
Since then, the conservative government of Carlos Holguín Mallarino offered the collection to the Spanish crown as a “gift.” Several historical documents make clear that it was a decision shrouded in secrecy.
In the words of the current Minister of Culture: “this gift in quotes was given under absolutely anomalous, secret conditions, with its back turned to the country, to the constitution of 1886, in an obtuse, quite unclear and illegitimate manner.”
On June 30, 1893, when the treasure had already been on display in Madrid for 8 months, the collection was officially handed over to Queen María Cristina of Austria.
The treasure was exhibited in the Spanish National Archaeological Museum since then and in 1941 it became part of the collection of the Museum of America, which is until today an institution dependent on the Ministry of Culture.
Claiming the Quimbaya treasure is a task that the Colombian government had pending since 2017, due to a decision of the Constitutional Court.
That Court ruled in favor of Colombian citizen Felipe Rincón, who argued in a 2006 lawsuit that President Holguín’s gift to the Spanish crown was made illegally, because it was not approved by Congress as required by the constitution of the time.
The governments of Juan Manuel Santos and Iván Duque did not advance, however, in the claim.
Minister Correa explains that the return of the collection by Spain would be an act of reparation.
“No matter how much time has passed, we cannot forget the successive exterminations that Spain carried out in America, not to produce acts of revenge or violence, but to produce acts of reparation,” he told BBC Mundo.
The Spanish state has not responded to the request.
In January of this year, however, the Spanish government had stated that “there is no doubt about the ownership or legality of obtaining” the Quimbaya treasure and that it “forms part of the collections of the Spanish State.”
At the same time, the Spanish Minister of Culture, Ernest Urtasun, who is also one of the recipients of the Colombian letter, announced a policy of “decolonization of museums.”
In an interview with the newspaper El País published in April, the director of the Museum of America expressed in this regard: “I am open to reviewing all cases, but not all the pieces requested have to be returned.”
And he added that criteria must be taken into account such as whether the obtaining of the pieces resulted from looting or abuse, which in his opinion is not the case with the Quimbaya treasure.
Correa contradicts this.
“One should not accept illegitimate gifts. And if you accepted them, it is good that you think about returning them to whom they belong, which is not, in any case, to President Holguín but to the culture that was plundered without being consulted about this gift. “, he claimed.
The Colombian minister added that, if the collection is returned, it is being evaluated that it will become part of an archaeological museum in Pereira, about 30 kilometers from the municipality of Filandia, where the tombs were found.
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