Outrage Grows After Belfast Auction Puts 3,000 Year Old Mummy Head Up for Sale

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3000 year old egyptian mummy head auction

BANGOR, June 26 (Parliament Politics Magazine) – On The Square Emporium, an auction house located in County Down near Belfast, has faced widespread condemnation from academics and politicians after listing ancient human remains for commercial sale. The controversial lots include a 3,000-year-old Egyptian mummy head and a Dayak tribal trophy skull originating from Borneo, Indonesia.

The Egyptian mummy head, valued at approximately £20,000, was reportedly brought to the UK during the 19th century as a souvenir from a wealthy family’s travels. Before appearing at the auction, the item spent decades stored in a cardboard box within an attic in the English Midlands. The auction house confirmed that a local private buyer has already been secured for the mummy head.

The second item, a Dayak tribal trophy skull dating between 800 BC and 750 BC, was described by the auctioneers as a museum-quality ethnographic piece. With bidding starting at £700, the lot features hand-incised scrollwork patterns carved into the cranium, a patina acquired in a traditional longhouse, and original rattan bindings. It is expected to fetch between £1,500 and £2,000.

Ethical Concerns and Academic Outcry

The decision to list these items has drawn sharp criticism from the British Association of Biological Anthropology and Osteoarchaeology (BABAO). Anthropologists involved with the organization have challenged the provenance of such remains, arguing that they were historically acquired through colonial exploitation and theft.

Experts maintain that the commercialization of biological remains strips the deceased of their dignity. Dr. Trish Biers, a Cambridge anthropologist who monitors the trade of human remains, highlighted the moral complications inherent in the market.

“Just because something is legal doesn’t mean it’s ethical,” said Dr. Biers.

On The Square Emporium human remains auction

Political Pressure for Reform

The incident has prompted a strong response from political figures, including Labour MP Bell Ribeiro-Addy. She has publicly condemned the listings and is currently sponsoring a bill intended to close legal loopholes. Her push for new legislation aims to entirely ban the trade of human tissue as commercial artifacts, arguing that the government must act to end this practice.

Beyond legislative pressure, the auction has faced logistical hurdles. Following the public outcry, several major online bidding platforms reportedly took action to block the auction house from using their software to host live bidding for these specific lots.

Legal Loopholes in the Trade

Under current UK law, the Human Tissue Act primarily prevents commercial trade for medical transplantation and regulates items less than 100 years old. Ancient and archaeological remains, therefore, currently exist in a legal grey area. Furthermore, under UK common law, a dead body is classified as no property, meaning it cannot technically be owned or stolen. This creates a market where individuals sell the possession of an item rather than the item itself.

Justin Lowry, the owner of On The Square Emporium, has defended the listing. He argued that once a person dies, the body becomes an inanimate object that holds historic and aesthetic value to collectors. Lowry dismissed calls for mandatory museum-only containment as hypocritical, noting that large numbers of historical remains are already kept in private homes across the UK. The auction house did not provide further comment following the widespread public criticism of the sale.

Daniele Naddei is a journalist at Parliament News covering European affairs, was born in Naples on April 8, 1991. He also serves as the Director of the CentroSud24 newspaper. During the period from 2010 to 2013, Naddei completed an internship at the esteemed local radio station Radio Club 91. Subsequently, he became the author of a weekly magazine published by the Italian Volleyball Federation of Campania (FIPAV Campania), which led to his registration in the professional order of Journalists of Campania in early 2014, listed under publicists. From 2013 to 2018, he worked as a freelance photojournalist and cameraman for external services for Rai and various local entities, including TeleCapri, CapriEvent, and TLA. Additionally, between 2014 and 2017, Naddei collaborated full-time with various newspapers in Campania, both in print and online. During this period, he also resumed his role as Editor-in-Chief at Radio Club 91.
Naddei is actively involved as a press officer for several companies and is responsible for editing cultural and social events in the city through his association with the Medea Fattoria Sociale. This experience continued until 2021. Throughout these years, he hosted or collaborated on football sports programs for various local broadcasters, including TLA, TvLuna, TeleCapri, Radio Stonata, Radio Amore, and Radio Antenna Uno.
From 2016 to 2018, Naddei was employed as an editor at newspapers of national interest within the Il24.it circuit, including Internazionale24, Salute24, and OggiScuola. Since 2019, Naddei has been one of the creators of the Rabona television program "Calcio è Passione," which has been broadcast on TeleCapri Sport since 2023.

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