[77811] in Daily_Rumour
congrats, you've been selected
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Confirmation Needed)
Wed Apr 23 07:24:47 2025
Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2025 13:24:45 +0200
From: "Confirmation Needed" <Congratulations@ericprim.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Ultimate Offers Program" <ConfirmationNeeded@ericprim.ru.com>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>
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congrats, you've been selected
http://ericprim.ru.com/ro9Y1ZFZ7in1JUPrIwwgVEIXZfbK2MfYxClkzySzZE6-7Hc9Hw
http://ericprim.ru.com/92UxEbB6G9lmG0NYYGnO9VGDjf6GVD3pmnSXwuWFZVrsoKtDNQ
iquities purchases. Charles Newton, the museum's Keeper of Greek and Roman Antiquities, had previously selected the object for purchase, and subsequently received it from Merlin. Rhousopoulos made the sale without securing the required permission from the state committee, but defended himself in the newspaper Elpis on 16 February [O.S. 4 February] 1867, arguing that the aryballos was "of no artistic value, the size of an apple, only valued for 25 drachmae". Efstratiadis, meanwhile, denounced Rhousopoulos as a "university professor; antiquities looter".
Efstratiadis's ability to respond to Rhousopoulos's breach of the law was limited: the state had few financial, human or legal resources to address the illegal excavation and trade of antiquities, and his superiors in government had little political will to do so. He also needed to maintain good relations with Athens's art dealers, who undertook more excavations in this period than either the Greek Archaeological Service or the closely aligned Archaeological Society of Athens, and usually offered to sell the artefacts they uncovered to the state. Furthermore, Rhousopoulos was periodically a member of the appraising committee of three, and often acted as a consultant to it, further limiting Efstratiadis's ability to use the state's archaeological apparatus aga
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">iquities purchases. Charles Newton, the museum's Keeper of Greek and Roman Antiquities, had previously selected the object for purchase, and subsequently received it from Merlin. Rhousopoulos made the sale without securing the required permission from the state committee, but defended himself in the newspaper Elpis on 16 February [O.S. 4 February] 1867, arguing that the aryballos was "of no artistic value, the size of an apple, only valued for 25 drachmae". Efstratiadis, meanwhile, denounced Rhousopoulos as a "university professor; antiquities looter". Efstratiadis's ability to respond to Rhousopoulos's breach of the law was limited: the state had few financial, human or legal resources to address the illegal excavation and trade of antiquities, and his superiors in government had little political will to do so. He also needed to maintain good relations with Athens's art dealers, who undertook more excavations in this period than either the Greek Archaeological Service or the closely aligned Archaeological Society of Athens, and usually offered to sell the artefacts they uncovered to the state. Furthermore, Rhousopoulos was periodically a member of the appraising committee of three, and often acted as a consultant to it, further limiting Efstratiadis's ability to use the state's archaeological apparatus aga</div>
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