Italian home raid nets artifacts

ROME — Police seized about 1,000 ancient artifacts from a wealthy Italian man’s country house outside Rome that were stolen from one of Emperor Trajan’s villas, prosecutors said Wednesday.

Authorities contend that the artifacts, which were being used to decorate the man’s weekend residence, were ripped off the walls of what is believed to be Trajan’s hunting retreat in Arcinazzo Romano, a town in the countryside outside Rome.

Some were stolen from boxes of fragments that archaeologists had excavated from the villa but had left at the site of the ongoing dig, prosecutors said.

The prosecutors declined to identify the man since they were still probing the theft, but said he was an affluent engineer who used the stolen artifacts to adorn his country home. The suspect was not in police custody as the probe continues.

Pieces of ancient Roman mosaics were inserted into the man’s basement floor and his fireplace and bathroom were decorated with other pieces, authorities said.

Many of the artifacts were damaged by glue that he apparently used to stick them to transparent display supports, said Marina Sapelli Ragni, Lazio’s superintendent for archaeology. Restorers would try to repair the damage, she said.

Authorities did not give an exact date for the raid, but indicated it happened more than a year ago. The artifacts had been under study for about a year before experts decided they came from Trajan’s 1st century villa.

The theft from the excavation site dates to 2002. Archaeologists said they realized the artifacts must have come from a royal villa because of the exceptionally fine quality of the decoration. Gilding was usually reserved for the most palatial villas of the ancient Romans.

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