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‘Quartered in the midst of the greatest collection in all Italy’: lessons from the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in wartime
Archaeology, Cultural Heritage and World War II: Italy, Greece, France and Finland as Historical Contexts, Pages: 35 - 60
Swansea University Author: Nigel Pollard
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DOI (Published version): https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004699984_004
Abstract
The experiences of the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in the Second World War provide a case study in microcosm of the dilemmas and risks faced by museums in conflict. Its curators faced decisions over how best to protect its collections in the face of a range of potential threats that were resolved by a...
Published in: | Archaeology, Cultural Heritage and World War II: Italy, Greece, France and Finland as Historical Contexts |
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ISBN: | 9789004699984 |
Published: |
Leiden
Brill
2024
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa64567 |
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v2 64567 2023-09-18 ‘Quartered in the midst of the greatest collection in all Italy’: lessons from the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in wartime da23d4fdd946eb6f605c5e6769dbd93f 0000-0002-8291-3334 Nigel Pollard Nigel Pollard true false 2023-09-18 CACS The experiences of the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in the Second World War provide a case study in microcosm of the dilemmas and risks faced by museums in conflict. Its curators faced decisions over how best to protect its collections in the face of a range of potential threats that were resolved by a combination of in situ protection and evacuation. Perhaps surprisingly, given the bomb damage suffered by other heritage sites in the historic centre of Naples, the museum and the portion of its collections that stayed with it remained unscathed, and even the British military occupation of the museum in December 1943 to June 1944 provided some positive lessons for the protection of cultural property in wartime. In contrast, the evacuated portion of the collections faced much greater risks, including the bombing of its refuge at the abbey of Montecassino, partial theft by German troops, and damage in transit. These experiences provide parallels with, and lessons for, the treatment of museum collections in modern conflicts. Book chapter Archaeology, Cultural Heritage and World War II: Italy, Greece, France and Finland as Historical Contexts 35 60 Brill Leiden 9789004699984 art protection, cultural heritage, cultural property protection, Montecassino, Monuments Men, Monuments, Fine Arts and Archives, Museum studies, Naples history, Second World War. 25 7 2024 2024-07-25 https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004699984_004 COLLEGE NANME Culture and Communications School COLLEGE CODE CACS Swansea University 2024-08-30T15:27:46.6407813 2023-09-18T11:00:16.5998115 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - History Nigel Pollard 0000-0002-8291-3334 1 |
title |
‘Quartered in the midst of the greatest collection in all Italy’: lessons from the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in wartime |
spellingShingle |
‘Quartered in the midst of the greatest collection in all Italy’: lessons from the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in wartime Nigel Pollard |
title_short |
‘Quartered in the midst of the greatest collection in all Italy’: lessons from the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in wartime |
title_full |
‘Quartered in the midst of the greatest collection in all Italy’: lessons from the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in wartime |
title_fullStr |
‘Quartered in the midst of the greatest collection in all Italy’: lessons from the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in wartime |
title_full_unstemmed |
‘Quartered in the midst of the greatest collection in all Italy’: lessons from the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in wartime |
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‘Quartered in the midst of the greatest collection in all Italy’: lessons from the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in wartime |
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da23d4fdd946eb6f605c5e6769dbd93f_***_Nigel Pollard |
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Nigel Pollard |
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Archaeology, Cultural Heritage and World War II: Italy, Greece, France and Finland as Historical Contexts |
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9789004699984 |
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The experiences of the Museo Nazionale di Napoli in the Second World War provide a case study in microcosm of the dilemmas and risks faced by museums in conflict. Its curators faced decisions over how best to protect its collections in the face of a range of potential threats that were resolved by a combination of in situ protection and evacuation. Perhaps surprisingly, given the bomb damage suffered by other heritage sites in the historic centre of Naples, the museum and the portion of its collections that stayed with it remained unscathed, and even the British military occupation of the museum in December 1943 to June 1944 provided some positive lessons for the protection of cultural property in wartime. In contrast, the evacuated portion of the collections faced much greater risks, including the bombing of its refuge at the abbey of Montecassino, partial theft by German troops, and damage in transit. These experiences provide parallels with, and lessons for, the treatment of museum collections in modern conflicts. |
published_date |
2024-07-25T15:27:45Z |
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11.037122 |