Thursday, April 10, 2025

The Quimbaya Treasure

The Quimbaya Treasure was looted in 1890 from two tombs in a site at La Soledad, Colombia.
The hoard, consisting of 122 gold pieces, was originally gifted by Colombian President Carlos Holguín Mallarino to Queen Maria Cristina of Spain in 1891. The official request for the treasure’s return was confirmed by Spain, following a letter dated May 9, 2024 signed by Colombian Foreign Minister Luis Gilberto Murillo and Minister of Culture Juan David Correa. The Quimbaya Treasure has been on display at the Museo de América in Madrid. The Quimbaya civilization was first recorded in the 1st century BC in parts of the Eje Cafetero and Valle del Cauca. The Quimbaya were noted for their skill in gold working.

The Quimbaya disappeared by the 18th century.
For more than a decade, Colombian legal experts debated whether the ancient artifacts should be repatriated. A 2006 case ended with a ruling that the gift of the treasure violated Colombia’s constitutional protections of cultural patrimony. Later appeals overturned the decision saying that the treasure had not been officially considered patrimony at the time it was handed over. The case has been before the Constitutional Court since 2012. When the Spanish arrived in Colombia, Quimbaya civilization was organized and centralized, with its center in the department of Quindío. Their lifestyle was based on the cultivation of yuca and corn, hunting and mining.

Mask with nose ornament, Colombia, Quimbaya


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