Boland had tried to obtain this collection since Jim's death, but he came to doubt it was possible.
29
The conflict between the new value and the probate valuation was a matter for concern, as was the way in which negotiations had gone on for many years.
In the middle of 1966 Eve wrote smugly to the museum's director.
As I have not heard from you for some time I assume you have given up the idea of purchasing my husband's coin collection. However, I think it is only fair to let you know that we have just had a very good offer for it, from England.
She was sorry the coins would leave Australia, but pointed out that it was probably best that it should be available to more scholars.
30
There was no reply. She travelled with the coin collection to England.
Albert Baldwin worried at Eve's delays. In the middle of 1967 Peter Stewart would come into his inheritance. Death duties would be levied and Eve's lawyer warned that a decision on the coins must be made immediately; the control of the estate would soon pass from her hands and Albert Baldwin would have to take direction from others.
31
In Kyrenia, preoccupied with plans for work that was going nowhere and arguments with Derek and Sonja, Eve dithered.
And then there were the pots. Almost every student who studied archaeology at Sydney University in the 1960s heard whispered gossip about the Great Pottery Controversy.
Jim and Eve had brought an enormous quantity of material to Australia, including pottery sherds and other excavated material from Vasilia, Ayia Paraskevi, Lapatsa and Palealona. Seventy-three purpose-built boxes held material just from the 1961 excavations. But who would work on the material? Although the Melbourne Cyprus Expedition maintained funds for excavations, there was little money available for the enormous amount of work that would be needed post-excavation. As is too often the case in archaeology, everyone wants to do the fieldwork, but no one wants to do the analysisâthe routine, often boring, work that takes so long and without which publication is impossible. Yet without publication, archaeology becomes simply a self-indulgent form of controlled destruction.
Almost as soon as Cambitoglou assumed control of the department, he closed the Nicholson Museum for renovations. Although it was not before time, all efforts went into the refit and not surprisingly work on the Cypriot pottery stalled. There were no staff to work on it apart from Derek Howlett who, for much of the time, was away sick. He and Cambitoglou clashed and their fight was bitter and personal. Intemperate letters were exchanged. Eve offered to help and asked that the pottery be sent to her at The Mount.
In March 1963, a year after Jim's death, thirty-one small cardboard boxes and an additional wooden box arrived at The Mount from the Nicholson.
32
More material remained in Sydney but Alexander told Eve that Derek would not be available to work on it. Eve was appalled to learn that unqualified people were handling the material
33
and, increasingly frustrated by delays, complained to Cambitoglou.
34
If no one in Sydney was available to work on the material, she said, she could deal with it herself at Mount Pleasant.
Cambitoglou asked Eve to return Schaeffer's Vounous material, which he understood was at The Mount
35
and the coins that belonged to the Nicholson.
36
In the middle of the year, Derek was sacked.
37
Eve's status was clarified when she was refused a parking certificate at the university
38
and then barred entry to the Nicholson's technical areas.
39
Who owned the excavated material? Although Melbourne University had sponsored the excavations, they contributed little money. Sydney University covered some costsâJim, Robert Merrillees and Betty Cameron were all on salary at Karmi. Cambitoglou was reluctant to cede control of the excavated material, although he had little interest in it. Eve argued that the question of âownership' was irrelevant. âIt is really only guardianship,' she said, âuntil the material can be handed over to the real owners: those institutions which contributed to the excavation'.
40
She continued to urge Sydney University to send the material to her so that she could meet her obligations to Cyprus. Recently appointed as Director of Antiquities, Vassos Karageorghis had demanded a written report on their excavations only days before Jim's death.
41
Confidential memos and private meetings consumed university time in 1964 and 1965. Whispered gossip ran wild in the department. Eve grew angry and impatient. She offered to come to Sydney to help with the packing but was rebuffed. In February 1965 Cambitoglou wrote to the Vice-Chancellor; they were yet to obtain eighty packing cases and needed to check the contents against various object lists. This might take some time, he thought, and added:
Unless packing is properly supervised, lists checked and properly receipted, the University may find itself in legal difficulty. I hope you will agree with me that we could not allow outside packers into the store rooms of the Nicholson Museum.
'
42
What happened next led to even more trouble.
On 16 March 1965 Eve acknowledged receipt of forty-three boxes of material from Vasilia and Ayia Paraskevi. At last she could begin the mending and drawing work that was essential for a final written report. Her letter to Cambitoglou was annotated with a note to Sir Stephen Roberts, the Vice-Chancellor:
Sorry to trouble you, and litter your desk with more b ⦠(Jim would have had a word for it!), but it seems that you are considered the âcorrect channel' for correspondence, so I had best keep you informed.
43
Michael Quinnell was an archaeology student at Sydney University. He had learned something of object conservation from Derek Howlett, and was now involved in packing material to send to Eve Stewart. He recalls there were twenty Early Cypriot tomb groups packed in large wooden crates and stored at the Golden Grove. They were moved to a room under the Nicholson, where the tomb groups were laid out and checked against typed lists. He remembers that most of the pots were complete. Some had been repaired but most were in one piece, although many had hairline fracturesâthey were âspringing'. The globular bodies of the jugs were particularly fragile. Michael was present when Alexander Cambitoglou decided to employ Grace Brothers, a Sydney furniture removal company, to pack the material. They wrapped the pots as they would fine china or glassware, and crammed them into tea chests. Before they began, Michael warned them not to pick up any of the jugs by the handle. Of course one of the workmen did and was left holding a handle and spout, the body of the pot shattering on the floor. This, Michael remembers, was the only pot broken at the museum. All the rest broke in transit.
44
Four days later Eve wrote to Cambitoglou. âNever again will I rely on your word', she told Cambitoglou. âWho was the cretin who packed them? No “packed” is not the right word, it looked as if everything had been deliberately bundled into the tea chests in a manner calculated to do most damage.
'
45
Not only were objects broken, but four cases were missing, together with Jim's plans and field notes, which she had sent to Sydney for a memorial exhibition for Jim in 1962. Eve wrote repeated and furious letters. In August 1965, over three years after Jim's death and nearly four since the Karmi excavations, the acting head of department Richard Green told the Vice-Chancellor: âI would be grateful therefore if you would let her know that the Department will not be available for her or Mr Howlett's inspection, as everything has been done already that can be done.
'
46
Eve's exile from Sydney University was complete.
Four months later, after a letter from Eve's solicitor, the four missing cases were miraculously found. Eve archly referred Cambitoglou to Luke XI:9â10: âSo I say to you: Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.
'
47
At least she retained a sense of humour.
Eve threatened to sue the university for damage done to archaeological material and the loss of Jim's field plans and site notebooks. The Melbourne Cyprus Expedition met to discuss the matter. Sir George Paton, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Melbourne, queried whether Eve had any legal right to either objects or notes, given that the expedition had been nominally Melbourne University's. A letter to Dr Nicolaou, Acting Director of the Department of Antiquities in Cyprus, elicited a response they hoped not to hear. The holder of the excavation licence was Professor J.R. Stewart, not the institution. The Director, Professor Stewart, was responsible for the distribution of finds to contributors.
The Melbourne Cyprus Expedition committee convened. Professor Hunt, from Melbourne, wrote confidentially to Cambitoglou suggesting the meeting should âstate clearly who is the authority for the distribution of the material when repaired ⦠If Mrs Stewart's threats of legal action mean that she thinks she owns the stuff, then she will want to distribute herself'. He suggested they argue that Sydney had made the greatest contribution, as they had paid the salaries of university staff. âPlease leave my name entirely out of this. It is my personal advice to you', he added.
48
At the meeting on 29 March, Professors Paton, Crawford, Hunt, Jackson and Cambitoglou were present, along with John Carter from Melbourne University and Eve. The committee agreed to sponsor Derek Howlett to work with Eve on the archaeological material until the middle of 1966 and to contribute £2000 to a last excavation on Cyprus to be led by Eve Stewart.
49
In August 1966, a confidential memo from the Vice-Chancellor of Melbourne University to the Acting Vice-Chancellor of Sydney University noted that:
At the luncheon meeting today Sir George Paton told me that the Melbourne-Cyprus-Expedition had granted travelling expenses from the Melbourne Cyprus Expedition funds to Mrs Stewart on the strict understanding that no legal action would be brought against either the University of Sydney or the University of Melbourne in the future. He also told me that Mrs Stewart had signed a document to this effect and that she had been granted the requisite travelling funds.
50
As far as both universities were concerned, this was the end of the matter.
As co-excavator Eve hoped to complete excavation work at Karmi. She and Derek and Sonja Howlett left for Cyprus late in 1966 but first they would tour England with the film she had made of the Karmi excavations. Eve had persuaded herself that the film would be warmly welcomed but she was hopelessly out of touch. Although she wrote seeking support, and visited thirty-three schools in three months, the money raised was paltry. In any case, TV was awash with a much more popular show âAnimal, Vegetable, Mineral', on which Sir Mortimer Wheeler and Glyn Danielâwell-known, highly respected archaeologistsâappeared regularly. The group sailed for England in late 1966, en route to Cyprus.
Tom Dray's estate in Cyprus and Egypt continued to pose problems which were exacerbated by distance. Eve's lawyer in Cyprus explained the seemingly intractable day-to-day problems. Of the various âplateau dwellers' who rented houses on Tjiklos, he thought that âjealousy and meddlesome activities' was the most apt description of their lifestyles. Petty rivalries came to a head over olives, each family suspecting the other of harvesting olives from trees they did not own.
The Cave Ladies were a unique problem. âHowever charming they may be in many ways', Eve's agent reported, they actively discouraged tenants from renting houses on Tjiklos. One potential renter was told fiercely that the area was a bird sanctuary and no dogs were allowed and the lawyer felt that if all potential tenants had to be
persona grata
with the Cave Ladies, Eve would never earn any rent at all. So fractious were relations between the various inhabitants of Tjiklos that the lawyer declared himself happy to resign and let the Cave Ladies take over!
51
The political situation on Cyprus also deteriorated during the 1960s. Distrust between Greek and Turkish Cypriots festered as groups agitated either for union with Greece (
enosis
) or Turkish partition (
taksim
). One of the Cave Ladies, Betty Hunter-Cowan, explained.
I don't know what sort of reports on the position here are getting out to you, but it is fairly dicy [
sic
] in the island, with only the British troopsâbless their khaki socksâstopping the EOKA thugs from massacring the Turks. We are keeping Tjiklos blatantly British and neutral and are now in No-Man's land between the Turks, who occupied the Pass on Boxing Day, and the EOKA boys in Kyrenia.
52
In March 1964, United Nations paratroopers had occupied Tjiklos and were installed in the main house. Although this sounded ominous, Eve's lawyer pointed out that it was better than having Tjiklos âsmashed up in fighting between Greek and Turk'. There was little likelihood of finding tenants for the houses, âunless, of course, we have an influx of U.N. Officials'.
53
As Tjiklos was in the UN danger zone, rents had halved.
54
The Cyprus visit was a disaster. Eve had applied to Vassos Karageorghis for a permit to excavate at Palealona,
55
explaining that she wanted to complete the excavations, open two extra tombs to the east of Tomb 9 and take soil samples for pollen analysis. She planned to hire Tryphon and six local workmen. Nothing seems to have come through and without any institutional support it was unlikely she would obtain a permit.
56
The group stayed at Tjiklos for a couple of months. Eve's diary records petty squabbles with Derek and Sonja, and her general disillusion, but little else. She was desolate that she had sunk to clearing looted tombs with volunteers: âwhat a lowering of J's high principles.
'
57
At least she was able to show her film at Karmi, although Tryphon was unable to attend. She obtained export permits for sherds and pots and flew from Nicosia airport on 26 May 1967.
58