British Museum and V&A to loan Ghana looted gold and silver

Gold and silver treasure looted from west Africa by the British army in the 19th century is to be loaned to Ghana in a three-year deal, the British Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum have announced.

The precious regalia, which had belonged to the Asante royal court, is regarded as part of the “national soul” of Ghana. Under the deal, 17 objects from the V&A and 15 from the British Museum, will go on show later this year at the Manhyia Palace Museum in Kumasi, the capital of Asante region. Many of the items have not been seen in Ghana for 150 years.

Most of the objects involved in a deal with Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, the current Asante king, were looted from Kumasi during Anglo-Asante wars in the 19th century. Some formed part of an indemnity payment forcibly extracted from the asantehene (king) at the time. But they also include a gold lute-harp that was presented to the British diplomat Thomas Bowdich during a trade treaty in 1817.

Gold lute-harp.
A gold lute-harp. Photograph: Trustees of the British Museum

Nana Oforiatta Ayim, a special adviser to Ghana’s culture minister, welcomed the deal as a “good starting point” in righting the wrongs of the UK’s violent colonial past.

Speaking to the BBC, which first reported the deal, she said: “They’re not just objects, they have spiritual importance as well. They are part of the soul of the nation. It’s pieces of ourselves returning.”

Ayim described the deal as a “sign of some kind of healing and commemoration for the violence that happened”

Tristram Hunt, director of the V&A, said the items were the equivalent of “our crown jewels”.

One of the gold objects that will go on display in Ghana.
One of the gold objects that will go on display in Ghana. Photograph: Dominic Naish /Victoria and Albert Museum, London

In a statement, he added: “One hundred and fifty years after the attack on Kumasi and looting of court regalia, the V&A is proud to be partnering with the Manhyia Palace Museum to display this important collection of Asante gold work. As part of our commitment to sharing collections with a colonial past, we are excited to see these items on public show, in Ghana, as part of Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II’s silver jubilee celebrations.”

Major museums in the UK, including the British Museum and V&A, are prevented by legislation from permanently handing back contested treasures in their collections. These include: the Parthenon marbles, which Greece has long campaigned to return to Athens; the Benin bronzes, which are the subject of a similar demand by Nigeria; and the Asante gold.

Hunt said the three-year deal with the king, which could be extended, was “not restitution by the back door”.

He added: “We have a responsibility to the countries of origin to think about how we can share those more fairly today. It doesn’t seem to me that all of our museums will fall down if we build up these kind of partnerships and exchanges.”