Deliverance, Hercules is adaption of Ηρακλής. Heracles is the transliteration, using latin letters, of Ερακλες, a different way to pronounce the name. Note that in Greek H is pronounced i like in the word this, is, it etc and E like in word ten, then, men. The latin H is representing a lost non used, nowadays, symbol that was helping in the pronounciation.
and shameless people stole these and many from original owners and show to their future generations how they looted the entire culture and made them kneel infront of statue.
Well, most were found in the ground. The original owners died long ago. Most of this is in museums and meant to educate us how people in the past lived. No one walks through a museum gloating how it was taken. Not even the original finders did that. There is a problem with some items about giving it back if the country of origin asks for it in some cases. But that's hardly the case in all of them.
You're right of course, although there are quite a lot of items in private collections around the world. I still think the US government and most likely at least the Vatican have secret caches of oddities and rare treasures stashed away somewhere safe.
Pate, Plus in many countries it is legal to obtain any ancient artifact if you can prove that it was found up to a date and you legally possess it, via purchase, heritage etc.
Here’s a gold armband with the Herakles knot. It was believed that the Herakles knot could cure wounds and had the power to avert evil, Ancient Greece, second to the third century, B.C.E.
Deliverance, Hercules is adaption of Ηρακλής. Heracles is the transliteration, using latin letters, of Ερακλες, a different way to pronounce the name. Note that in Greek H is pronounced i like in the word this, is, it etc and E like in word ten, then, men. The latin H is representing a lost non used, nowadays, symbol that was helping in the pronounciation.
and shameless people stole these and many from original owners and show to their future generations how they looted the entire culture and made them kneel infront of statue.
Well, most were found in the ground. The original owners died long ago. Most of this is in museums and meant to educate us how people in the past lived. No one walks through a museum gloating how it was taken. Not even the original finders did that. There is a problem with some items about giving it back if the country of origin asks for it in some cases. But that's hardly the case in all of them.
You're right of course, although there are quite a lot of items in private collections around the world. I still think the US government and most likely at least the Vatican have secret caches of oddities and rare treasures stashed away somewhere safe.
Pate, Plus in many countries it is legal to obtain any ancient artifact if you can prove that it was found up to a date and you legally possess it, via purchase, heritage etc.
Well, most were found in the ground. The original owners died long ago. Most of this is in museums and meant to educate us how people in the past lived. No one walks through a museum gloating how it was taken. Not even the original finders did that.
There is a problem with some items about giving it back if the country of origin asks for it in some cases.
But that's hardly the case in all of them.
You're right of course, although there are quite a lot of items in private collections around the world. I still think the US government and most likely at least the Vatican have secret caches of oddities and rare treasures stashed away somewhere safe.
Plus in many countries it is legal to obtain any ancient artifact if you can prove that it was found up to a date and you legally possess it, via purchase, heritage etc.