The Treasure of Harageh collection consists of 37 items such as flasks, vases and jewelry inlaid with lapis lazuli, a rare mineral. Discovered by famed British archaeologist Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie, the relics date to roughly 1900 BC, excavated from a tomb near the city of Fayum.
Portions of the excavated antiquities were given in 1914 to donors in St. Louis who helped underwrite the dig. The planned auction had been condemned by US and British historians who feared the loss of a valuable cultural resource to the private marketplace.
The collection was owned by the St. Louis Society of the Archaeological Institute of America. It was initially housed at the St. Louis Art Museum and then at Washington University in St. Louis before it was placed in private storage two years ago.
The auction prompted the national archaeological institute's national office to rebuke the independent St. Louis chapter in a written statement that cited its "firmly expressed ethical position concerning the curation of ancient artifacts for the public good."
"Museums and archaeologists are stewards of the past," she said. "They should not sell archaeological items in their collections for profit."
Such auctions place other antiquities at risk by "providing incentives for global criminal activity that can lead directly to the loss of the art they claim to value," she added.
"If there had been any way that we could have reasonably kept these items in St. Louis, we never would have pursued this course," he said. "One way or the other, we had to find a new home."
Doug Boin, a history professor at Saint Louis University, called the Met's purchase "a happy ending for the collection."
But he expressed dismay at the St. Louis group's approach, noting that another item from the Harageh excavation sold separately at auction for more than USD 44,000. Before the scheduled auction, the St. Louis society's president, a Washington University professor, resigned in protest, and members remain dissatisfied, he said.
