Palmyra was
captured by the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in May 2015. The militants booby-trapped the arch some time later, and on 4 October it was reported that the arch had been blown up using
dynamite. Footage released on 8 October showed that half of the structure was still standing, but by the time of the
recapture of Palmyra by the Syrian Army in March 2016, very little of the arch remained standing. The Office of the
President of Syria as well as the director-general of
UNESCO condemned the destruction of the Monumental Arch. According to the
United Nations, the destruction showed that ISIL was "terrified by history and culture." In March 2016, director of
DGAM Maamoun Abdelkarim stated that the Monumental Arch, along with the
Temples of Bel and
Baalshamin, will be rebuilt using existing remains, a process called
anastylosis. According to a Syrian official, reconstructing the arch would not be difficult since many of its stones still survive. A replica of the central part of the Monumental Arch was carved out of Egyptian marble in
Italy by machinery using a 3D computer model by the
Institute for Digital Archaeology in Oxford, England. The replica was installed in
Trafalgar Square,
London on 19 April 2016. It was displayed there for three days, before being moved to a number of other locations, including
New York City,
Florence,
Geneva,
Washington, D.C., and
Dubai. It is to be sent to Syria afterwards, yet as of 2023 this has still not happened. The first phase of restoration of the Arch began on 12 November 2021. In October 2022, the Syrian
Directorate-General of Antiquities and Museums and the Institute for the History of Material Culture of
Russian Academy of Sciences signed an agreement to start the second and third phase of the project for restoring Arch of Triumph. ==References==