UK government’s acquisition of the Marbles
The assertion by the British Museum on its website that the Parthenon Marbles were legally obtained is unproven and unsafe. The BCRPM therefore states on its own website in the name of balance and objectivity that the legality of the UK government’s acquisition of the Marbles remains entirely unproven.

For 200 years the Greeks have been yearning for the return of their marble sculptures taken by England from the Parthenon.

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Featured Article
Rt Hon Robert Jenrick MP's woeful outlook on the reunification of the Parthenon Marbles
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The British Committee for the Reunification of the Parthenon Marbles

Find out about the various ways to get involved with the campaign, or simply learn more about the subject.

Leading Quotes
Supportive Views

"The British Museum could become a truly moral, world Museum of the 21st century, recognising that Athens, having built a home for the Parthenon sculptures, is worthy of exhibiting the surviving fragmented pieces in the Acropolis Museum."
- Dame Janet Suzman

"It would be a good thing if the British Museum gave the 2,500-year-old sculptures back to Greece. Even in England the polling is in favour of returning the marbles."
- George Clooney

"Where is that firman? (the Ottoman document used by Elgin as the basis of proving the supposed legality of the Marbles’ removal) Does it exist? Recognising that what you did in the past isn't always the right thing for the present. You can't justify something now with what took place 200 years ago."
- Victoria Hislop

Case for Return

The Parthenon Gallery in the Acropolis Museum, is the one place on earth where it is possible to experience simultaneously the Parthenon and its missing sculptures.

History of Marbles
The History of the Marbles

For 200 years the Greeks have been yearning for the return of their marble sculptures taken by England from the Parthenon.

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Sofka Smales, Trafalgar Square's Fourth Plinth & the Parthenon Marbles

On Saturday September 12th, 2009 from 11 pm to midnight the Fourth Plinth in the north west of Trafalgar Square, home to Antony Gormley's Project "One & Other" will be occupied by Sofka Smales.

When nineteen year old Sofka heard she had won a place on the fourth Plinth she seized the opportunity to promote a cause close to her heart: the return of the Parthenon Marbles to their birth place.

"I feel really passionate about this", explained Sofka, a student of Criticism, Communication and Curation at London's Central St. Martins College. "My mother is half Greek and I lived in Greece for part of my childhood. I am really proud of that part of my heritage and have always felt that the Parthenon Marbles should rightly be returned to their country of origin. Especially now, that a first class museum has been built to house them."

So what is Sofka going to do when she takes her place on the Trafalgar Square's Fourth Plinth? "That's a secret. Wait and see!" she says. "I hope lots of people will come out to support me and many more will go online to watch. It's time to send the Marbles home!"

From 6 July 2009 to 14 October the Fourth Plinth will be occupied by different people every hour, 24 hours a day, for 100 days. The rules are simple: you must stand on the Plinth alone, for the whole hour; you can do whatever you want, provided it is legal; and you can take anything with you that you can carry.

For information on the Fourth Plinth, visit the link here.


 


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