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APPENDIX 2: Russian Legal Instruments Relating to Cultural Valuables Displaced as a Result of the Second World War, 1990–2009

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 September 2010

Patricia Kennedy Grimsted
Affiliation:
Ukrainian Research Institute, and Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University; International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam. E-mail: grimsted@fas.harvard.edu

Extract

The following list is limited narrowly to post-1991 Russian legal instruments relating to cultural valuables of foreign provenance seized and transported to the Soviet Union from Germany and Eastern Europe at the end of the Second World War, or in the immediate postwar period. Widely known in Russia as the “trophy” valuables, officially those cultural objects (art, books, and archives) are usually referred to in Russia more euphemistically as “cultural valuables displaced [or relocated] to the USSR,” although most frequently translated in a European context as “displaced cultural valuables.” The term “displaced” is used here, and may include some cultural property and archives that came to the USSR during the war itself, as well as those removed from Germany and Eastern Europe by Soviet authorities at the end of or immediately after the war. Many items involved were actually twice captured, or “twice saved,” as the saying goes in Russia, having been first captured by the Nazis, mostly from “enemies of the regime,” and then captured a second time and “safeguarded” by the Soviets.

Type
Appendix
Copyright
Copyright © International Cultural Property Society 2010

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References

Kowalski, Wojciech. Likwidacja skutków II Wojny światowej w dyiedzinie kultury. Warsaw: Instytut kultury, 1994.Google Scholar
Kowalski, Wojciech. Liquidation of Effects of World War II in the Area of Culture, trans. Cękalska, Krystyna. Warsaw: Intergraf, 1994.Google Scholar
Grimsted, Patricia Kennedy, Hoogewoud, F.J., and Ketelaar, Eric (eds.). Returned from Russia: Nazi Archival Plunder in Western Europe and Recent Restitution Issues. Institute of Art and Law, (UK) 2007.Google Scholar
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