Greece has asked France to loan a Parthenon marble frieze fragment displayed at Paris’s Louvre Museum to mark its 200th independence anniversary in 2021, an official said Saturday.
“The details will be worked out by the respective culture ministries. This is a temporary exchange,” the official added.
State agency ANA on Friday said the issue had been discussed during talks between Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris this week.
The 5th-century BC frieze depicts a scene from a mythical battle between Centaurs — mythological creatures with the upper body of a human and the lower body and legs of a horse — and men.
In return, Greece will loan the Louvre a collection of ancient bronze artifacts, ANA said.
According to the Louvre, the frieze was found at the foot of the Parthenon in 1788 by Louis Francois Sebastien Fauvel, a French diplomat.
Alongside Britain and Russia, France fought a decisive naval battle against Ottoman forces at Navarino in 1827 to help Greece win its independence.
A much larger collection of Parthenon Marbles is on display at the British Museum in London and Greece has long pursued a campaign for their return.