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Ancient voices immortalized

Two volumes of manuscripts stolen during the 1940s now have a permanent home in Hunan and help shed light on the Warring States Period, Li Muyun and He Chun report in Changsha.

By LI MUYUN and HE CHUN | HK edition | Updated: 2025-10-18 09:38
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Zhu Ye, deputy director-general of Office for the Recovery and Restitution of Lost Cultural Property, National Cultural Heritage Administration of China, and Chase Robinson, director of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Asian Art, attend the ceremony for the return of the manuscripts in Washington, DC on May 16. XINHUA

After nearly eight decades overseas, two volumes were handed over by the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Asian Art in the US and transferred to China's National Cultural Heritage Administration in May. Volume I, titled Sishi Ling, is privately owned and preserved in the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in Washington, DC.

The return of these manuscripts is a significant achievement, resulting from years of collaboration between China and the US in the fields of culture and museums. It sets an example for international cooperation in artifact restitution, Rao Quan, head of the National Cultural Heritage Administration, said at the ceremony on Monday.

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