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Benin Bronzes

The Benin Bronzes are a group of several thousand metal plaques and sculptures that decorated the royal palace of the Kingdom of Benin, in what is now Edo State, Nigeria. The metal plaques were produced by the Guild of Benin Bronze Casters, now located in Igun Street, also known as Igun-Eronmwon Quarters. Collectively, the objects form the best examples of Benin art and were created from the fourteenth century by artists of the Edo people. The plaques, which in the Edo language are called Ama, depict scenes or represent themes in the history of the kingdom. Apart from the plaques, other sculptures in brass or bronze include portrait heads, jewellery, and smaller pieces.

Pre-1897 significance
The time before 1897, in the period of the kingdom of Benin, was identified as the relative independence and power, also known as the Edo Empire. The pre-1897 significance of the Benin Kingdom, governed by the obas, also included control over trade and territory and nurturing the production of bronze and ivory art. The kingdom also encountered challenges from the British because they were trying to gain access to Benin resources. == History ==
History
Social context and creation Many of the dramatic sculptures date to the thirteenth century, and a large part of the collection dates to the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is believed that two "Golden Ages" in Benin metal workmanship occurred during the reigns of Esigie (fl. 1550) and of Eresoyen (1735–1750), when their workmanship achieved its highest quality. The Kingdom of Benin, which occupied southern parts of present-day Nigeria between the fourteenth and nineteenth centuries, was rich in sculptures of diverse materials, such as iron, bronze, wood, ivory and terra cotta. The Oba's palace in Benin City, the site of production for the royal ancestral altars, also was the site for an elaborate court ceremonial life in which the Oba of Benin, his warriors, chiefs and titleholders, priests, members of the palace societies and their constituent guilds, foreign merchants and mercenaries, and numerous retainers and attendants all took part. The palace, a vast sprawling agglomeration of buildings and courtyards, was the setting for hundreds of rectangular brass plaques whose relief images portray the persons and events that animated the court. Bronze and ivory objects had a variety of functions in the ritual and courtly life of the Kingdom of Benin. They were used principally to decorate the royal palace, which contained many bronze works. They were hung on the pillars of the palace by nails punched through them. Only at the beginning of the nineteenth century, when colonization and missionary activity began, did larger numbers of African works begin to be taken to Europe, where they were described as simple curiosities of "pagan" cults. This attitude changed after the Benin Expedition of 1897. In 1897, the vice consul general James Robert Phillips, of the Niger Coast Protectorate, together with six other British officials, two businessmen, translators, and 215 porters, set off toward Benin from the small port of Sapele, Nigeria, Although they had given word of their intended visit, they were later informed that their journey must be delayed, because no foreigner could enter the city while rituals were being conducted; however, the travellers ignored the warning and continued on their expedition. They were ambushed at the south of the city by Oba warriors, and only two Europeans survived the ensuing massacre. The works taken by the British were a treasure hoard of bronze and ivory sculptures, including king heads, queen mother heads, leopard figurines, bells, and a great number of images sculpted in high relief, all of which were executed with a mastery of lost-wax casting. In 1910, German researcher Leo Frobenius carried out an expedition to Africa with the aim of collecting works of African art for museums in his country. By 1988, perhaps as few as fifty pieces remained in Nigeria while approximately 2,400 pieces were held in European and American collections. Division among museums |upright The Benin Bronzes that were part of the booty of the punitive expedition of 1897 had different destinations: one portion ended up in the private collections of various British officials; the Foreign and Commonwealth Office sold a large number, which later ended up in various European museums, mainly in Germany, and in American museums. The British Museum in London became home to the largest single holding approximately 900 objects while scores of other institutions in Germany, France, the Netherlands and the United States obtained significant troves. == Subsequent sales, restitutions and repatriations ==
Subsequent sales, restitutions and repatriations
The two largest collections of Benin Bronzes are located in the Ethnological Museum of Berlin and in the British Museum in London, while the third largest collection is located in several museums in Nigeria (principally the Nigerian National Museum in Lagos). Since gaining independence in 1960, Nigeria has sought the return of the bronzes on several occasions. There has been extensive debate over the location of the bronzes being distant from their place of origin. Their return has been considered a test case in the international debate over restitution of cultural objects from Africa, comparable to that of the Elgin Marbles, and have helped change attitudes towards repatriation. The sales stopped in 1972, and the museum's African art specialist said that he regretted them. In 1968, Christie's sold a Benin head that was discovered by a police officer in his neighbour's greenhouse for £21,000. Oba Ewuare II subsequently announced plans to put the bronzes in a future museum on or near his palace grounds. As a result, the Museum of West African Art, (MOWAA) which had been chosen to display the bronzes and was partially funded by the German government, opened in 2024 with no bronzes in its collection. European journalists noted that conditions under which the German government had returned Benin Bronzes were ignored by Buhari. On 12 October 2025, The Guardian announced that in November of that year, the MOWAA will feature only clay reproductions of Benin bronzes within an artistic installation by Yinka Shonibare, rather than authentic pieces. This represents a significant departure from official 2020 announcements promising the institution would house the world's most extensive collection of these artifacts. As the Nigerian government had announced that the Oba of Benin holds legitimate ownership and custodial rights over the looted artifacts, they must remain within his Benin City residence unless the royal family determines an alternative arrangement. According to the MOWAA's director Phillip Ihenacho, one gallery will present findings from an archaeological excavation at the museum's location, funded with approximately £3 million from the British Museum. Another display will feature objects representing three thousand years of Nigerian and West African history. “Some of them may well be made of bronze,” Ihenacho was quoted. “But there will be nothing that was involved in the restitution process.” Germany In April 2021, the German government declared the restitution of "looted" Benin Bronzes in Germany's public collections by 2022. Hartmut Dorgerloh, the director of the Humboldt Forum, which incorporates the Ethnological Museum of Berlin, said at a press event that a previous plan to exhibit the bronzes in a new museum complex in Berlin was "now not imaginable". Also in April 2021, the Church of England promised to return two Benin bronzes that were given as gifts to the then-Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Runcie in 1982. These bronzes were meant to join the collection of the future Benin Royal Museum. In the same month, the Horniman Museum in South London said it was considering legal advice in terms of repatriation and restitution of 49 works from Benin City, including 15 Benin Bronzes, in its possession. In July 2022, Germany became the first European country to sign a joint political declaration to restitute 1,130 bronzes. That accord committed Germany to return artifacts and to support archaeological work and museum development in Nigeria. The physical transfers have proceeded in stages due to logistical and diplomatic complexities. On December 20, 2022, Germany formally handed over an initial batch of 20 bronzes in Abuja, with Germany’s Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock stating this gesture acknowledged “the injustice of a colonial past”. In early 2023, several German cities including Berlin, Hamburg and Cologne transferred ownership rights of a wider collection, with display loans negotiated to maintain occasional European exhibitions. In July 2022, Germany announced the immediate ownership transfer of 1,100 artefacts held by the Linden Museum in Stuttgart, the Humboldt Forum in Berlin, the Rautenstrauch-Joest Museum in Cologne, the Museum am Rothenbaum in Hamburg, and the State Ethnographic Collections of Saxony. The physical return of each item was negotiated between the German museums and the Nigerian government, with a "representative collection of objects" slated to remain in Germany on a long-term loan. On 28 November 2022, London's Horniman Museum held an official ceremony to unconditionally transfer ownership of its Benin Bronzes back to Nigeria. The Netherlands Nigeria received 119 bronzes from the Netherlands after a series of meetings between both governments. This return of the Benin Bronzes is part of the plan by the government of the Netherlands for cultural restitution and historical justice. In February 2025, Nigeria and the Netherlands concluded an agreement for the return of 119 bronzes housed in Leiden's collections, marking the largest single restitution to date. The handover ceremony in Edo State featured Oba Ewuare II, who celebrated the return as a “divine intervention” in restoring cultural sovereignty. The handover ceremony took place on the 21st of June 2025, with the Minister for Arts, Culture, and the Creative Economy; the Director General of the National Commission of Museums and Monuments; Benin Chiefs; and other cultural and heritage professionals in Nigeria. The repatriated Benin Bronzes will be taken to Benin City to be received by the Oba of Benin and then kept in a gallery that will be made available following a partnership between the museum commission and Coronation Group. On 19 June 2025, the Dutch government returned a group of 113 bronzes from its national collection and another six from the collection of the city of Rotterdam, "the single largest return of Benin antiquities directly linked to the 1897 British punitive expedition" to date. United Kingdom British institutions have moved more cautiously. In response to the British Museum's continued refusal to return looted Benin bronzes, the Iyase (traditional prime minister) of the Benin Kingdom unveiled the largest bronze plaque to date on 30 July 2021. The plaque contains over 2 tons of brass and was created by one of the grandsons of Iyase Lukas Osarobo Zeickner-Okoro. It is titled The Return of Oba Ewuare to symbolise the Benin belief in reincarnation and a restart of the Benin Bronze Age in the reign of Oba Ewuare II. The piece was offered to the British Museum in exchange for the bronzes held there. The Horniman Museum in London became the first UK museum to return bronzes in November 2022. Negotiations continue with the British Museum, whose collection of around 900 objects remains protected by an act of Parliament. Cambridge University’s Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology has also faced pressure to repatriate more than 100 items; those discussions are ongoing as of early 2025. The group comprises representatives of several international museums, the Royal Court of Benin, the Edo State government, and the Nigerian National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM). In 2015, Mark Walker returned some Benin Bronzes that were taken by his grandfather during the siege on Benin Kingdom; he was received by Prince Edun Akenzua in Benin City. The University of Aberdeen agreed in March 2021 to return a bronze head of an Oba that had been purchased at an auction in 1957. The return was completed at a handover ceremony held on 28 October 2021. In October 2021, Jesus College, Cambridge, announced that it would repatriate a sculpture of a cockerel, known as Okukor, to Nigeria after the student body brought to light its historical significance as a looted artefact. The statue had been removed from display in 2016 after calls for its repatriation; following an investigation by the college's Legacy of Slavery Working Party, it was ascertained that the statue had been taken directly from the court of Benin before being gifted to the college by the father of a student in 1905. In February 2022, Okukor and the bronze returned by the University of Aberdeen were received at the royal palace in Benin City by the Oba of Benin, Ewuare II. In December 2022, the University of Cambridge legally transferred ownership of more than 100 Benin artefacts from its Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology to the NCMM. A museum spokesperson declared that some of the pieces were to remain in Cambridge "on extended loan" to ensure that "this west African civilisation continues to be represented in the museum's displays, and in teaching for school groups". As of February 2025, the statues have yet to be sent to Nigeria. In January 2022, the Great North Museum: Hancock in Newcastle agreed to return a Benin Bronze stave to Nigeria. United States In November 2021, the Metropolitan Museum of Art transferred two sixteenth-century Bronze plaques, Warrior Chief and Junior Court Official, to the NCMM. The plaques had previously been held by the British Museum and the National Museum Lagos before entering the international art market under unclear circumstances and eventually being donated to the Met in 1991. After conducting provenance research in collaboration with the British Museum, the Met deaccessioned the works and arranged their return. The museum retains approximately 160 additional objects from Benin City in its collection, many of which were acquired through donations from private collectors who had purchased them on the art market in the late twentieth century. Historian and journalist Barnaby Phillips, who has researched the history of the bronzes, argued that the Met had long been aware of concerns about the objects’ provenance and only recently initiated an investigation. He suggested that the museum chose to return the plaques because they had been illegally removed from a Nigerian museum after the country’s independence in 1960, rather than because of their earlier colonial-era looting. The decision was therefore driven primarily by legal considerations under the 1970 UNESCO Convention, which calls for the return of cultural property stolen from museums or public monuments, rather than by broader ethical claims for repatriation. In March 2022, the Smithsonian Institution announced that 39 bronzes would be repatriated, intended for display at the future National Museum of Benin City. The Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African Art signed over ownership of 29 Benin bronzes to the NCMM on 11 October 2022, with Nigerian leaders and cultural officials in attendance; at the same time, the National Gallery of Art returned one Benin bronze. Switzerland In March 2026, the Benin Initiative Switzerland (BIS) committed to returning Benin bronzes and cultural artifacts from three museums to Nigeria. The three Swiss museums, the University of Zurich's Ethnographic Museum, the Rietberg Museum, and the Musée d'ethnographie de Genève, signed agreements to transfer ownership of 28 Benin artifacts to Nigeria. Fourteen objects from the University of Zurich are to be returned to the Nigerian National Museum in Lagos, while some pieces from the Rietberg Museum will remain in Switzerland as long-term loans at Nigeria's request. "The Nigerian side was very interested in the idea that the history and the artistry of Benin would still be told in Switzerland," Rietberg director Annette Bhagwati told The Art Newspaper. Opposition In August 2022, the Restitution Study Group, an African-American slavery reparations activist organization, petitioned against British repatriation of Benin Bronzes. The group argued that in the past, African people had been complicit in selling captives into the Atlantic slave trade and suggested that descendants of enslaved Africans should have co-ownership over the Benin Bronzes in Western museums. The group filed a petition to prevent the Smithsonian Institution's repatriation in 2022, arguing that the bronzes were linked to the descendants of enslaved people in America because they were made with metal ingots traded for African slaves and that removing the bronzes would deny Americans the opportunity to experience their heritage. The petition was denied, and subsequent appeals as high as the Supreme Court failed to overturn the verdict. Digital Benin online platform In November 2022, the Digital Benin online database was launched with support from a number of African and Western museums. Digital Benin lists over 130 institutions in 20 countries with Benin cultural heritage in their collections. The site displays information about the specifications, location, and provenance of more than 5,000 artefacts, including maps, high-resolution images, and titles of the works in English and Edo. == The works ==
The works
The Benin Bronzes are more naturalistic than most African art of the period. The bronze surfaces are designed to highlight contrasts between light and metal. The features of many of the heads are exaggerated from natural proportions, with large ears, noses, and lips, which are shaped with great care. The most notable aspect of the works is the high level of metal working skill at lost-wax casting. The descendants of these artisans still revere Igue-Igha, as the person who introduced the art of casting to the Kingdom of Benin. Themes depicting a warrior or noble The rectangular plaques exist in two formats. In one, the long vertical sides are turned back, creating a small edge that is decorated with an incised guilloché pattern. In the other format, which is much narrower, the turned-back edges are missing and the design of the plaque background ends abruptly, as if cut off. These variations probably reflect the size and shape of the palace pillars and the arrangement of the plaques on them. The plaques are generally about thick. The leaves were used in healing rites by priestesses of Olokun, the god of the sea. Some of the reliefs represent important battles of the sixteenth-century wars of expansion; however, the majority depict dignitaries wearing ceremonial dress. Most of the plaques portray static figures, either alone, in pairs, or in small groups arranged hierarchically around a central figure. Many of the figures depicted in the plaques may be identified only through their clothing and emblems, which indicated their rank and function in the court, but not their individual identities. Although there have been attempts to link some of the depictions with historical figures, these identifications have been speculative and unverified. In certain cases, the lack of information even extends to the functional roles of some figures, which cannot conclusively be determined. but by contrast, Babatunde Lawal cites examples of relief carving in southern Nigerian art to support his theory that the plaques are indigenous to Benin. British archaeologist and anthropologist Dan Hicks discussed the looting of the Benin Bronzes and their current presence within museums around the world. In his book he expressed the view that the looting of the Benin Bronzes are not an 'historical incident of reception' but an 'enduring brutality'. It was also noted that a total figure of looted artefacts from Benin was up to 10,000 bronzes, ivories and other objects. Hicks notes that many of the looted Benin artefacts are in regional and university museums within the UK rather than the more well-known collections such as the British Museum, Royal Collection and the Victoria and Albert Museum. == Influence on contemporary African art ==
Influence on contemporary African art
A collection of artefacts stolen from the kingdom of Benin in 1897, had a huge and great impact on the African art. The artefacts are known for their intricate craftsmanship and historical significance. Their impact extends above aesthetics, cultural heritage and the representation of African artefacts at large. Technique . The molten metal is poured into the mould. Although the works generally are called the Benin Bronzes, they are made of different materials. Many are made of Brass, which analysis has shown to be an alloy of copper, zinc and lead in various proportions. Others are non-metallic, made of wood, ceramic, ivory, leather or cloth. The wooden objects are made in a complex process. It starts with a tree trunk or branch and is carved directly. The artist obtains the final form of the work from a block of wood. Since it was customary to use freshly cut wood in carvings, once the piece was finalized the surface was charred to prevent cracking during drying. This also allowed for polychromatic artworks, which were achieved using knife cuts and applications of natural pigments made with vegetable oil or palm oil. This type of grease, which was made near smoke from homes, allowed the wooden sculptures to acquire a patina that resembles rusty metal. The figures depicted in the bronzes were cast in relief with details incised in the wax model. Artists working in bronze were organized into a type of guild under royal decree and lived in a special area of the palace under the direct control of the Oba. The works made using lost-wax casting required great specialisation. Their quality was superior when the king was especially powerful, allowing him to employ a great number of specialists. Although the oldest examples of similar Benin metal work in bronze date from the twelfth century, according to tradition, the lost-wax casting technique was introduced to Benin by the son of the Oni, or sovereign of Ife. Their tradition holds that he taught the Benin metal workers the art of casting bronze using lost-wax techniques during the thirteenth century. These Benin artisans refined that technique until they were able to cast plaques only an eighth-of-an-inch (3 mm) thick, surpassing the art as practiced by Renaissance masters in Europe. == Reception ==
Reception
One sixteenth-century bronze, depicting the Oba with Europeans, was featured in A History of the World in 100 Objects, a series of radio programmes that started in 2010 as a collaboration between the BBC and the British Museum; it was also published as a book. ==See also==
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