Walk, Seymour
Walsh, John
Warren, E. P.
Wedgwood, Joshua
Weintraub, Sy
White, Shelby
. See also
Levy-White collection
Wight, Karol
Wilkie, Nancy
Williams, Dyfri
Williams, Harold
Wilson, Peter
Winckelman, Johann Joachim
Wish fulfillment
Wood, James N.
Würzburg Painter
Xoilan Trader, Inc.
Zakos, George
Zavitsianos, Apostolos
Zbinden Collection
Zevi, Fausto
Zicchi, Danilo
Zirganos, Nikolas
ABOUT THE AUTHORS:
Peter Watson
has written for the
New York Times
, the
Los Angeles Times
, the
London Times
and
Sunday Times
, the
Observer
, and
Spectator
. Since June 1997, he has been a research associate at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge. His books include
The Caravaggio Conspiracy
,
From Manet to Manhattan
, and
Sotheby's: The Inside Story
.
Â
Cecilia Todeschini
is a researcher and translator who has worked for the BBC, ITV, CBS, ABC, and CBC. For many years she specialized in reporting on the Mafia, covering the great trials in Palermo. Among many other subjects, she has also covered papal conclaves.
Â
Nikolas Zirganos
(Chapter 21) is an investigative reporter based in Athens. He works for
Kyriakatiki Eleftheroptypia
newspaper and
Epsilon
magazine.
PublicAffairs is a publishing house founded in 1997. It is a tribute to the standards, values, and flair of three persons who have served as mentors to countless reporters, writers, editors, and book people of all kinds, including me.
Â
I . F. STONE, proprietor of
I. F. Stone's Weekly
, combined a commitment to the First Amendment with entrepreneurial zeal and reporting skill and became one of the great independent journalists in American history. At the age of eighty, Izzy published
The Trial of Socrates,
which was a national bestseller. He wrote the book after he taught himself ancient Greek.
Â
BENJAMIN C. BRADLEE was for nearly thirty years the charismatic editorial leader of
The Washington Post.
It was Ben who gave the
Post
the range and courage to pursue such historic issues as Watergate. He supported his reporters with a tenacity that made them fearless and it is no accident that so many became authors of influential, best-selling books.
Â
ROBERT L. BERNSTEIN, the chief executive of Random House for more than a quarter century, guided one of the nation's premier publishing houses. Bob was personally responsible for many books of political dissent and argument that challenged tyranny around the globe. He is also the founder and longtime chair of Human Rights Watch, one of the most respected human rights organizations in the world.
Â
Â
For fifty years, the banner of PublicAffairs Press was carried by its owner Morris B. Schnapper, who published Gandhi, Nasser, Toynbee, Truman, and about 1,500 other authors. In 1983, Schnapper was described by
The Washington Post
as “a redoubtable gadfly.” His legacy will endure in the books to come.
Peter Osnos,
Founder and Editor-at-Large
a
From Etruria in Italy, the modern area stretching north of Rome to Grosseto, Siena, and Florence and into Umbria as far as Perugia.
b
This illegal dig had come to light when a building company had been clearing a road, which had collapsed. It turned out that the road had collapsed because tombaroli had built a tunnel under it, to get from a house on one side to a
stipe
âa room attached to a templeâopposite. Votive objects galore had been smuggled out via this tunnel, but once the road had collapsed, the very distinctive antiquities from Scrimbia had been on the Carabinieri's watch list ever since. Dozens of objects in Savoca's mansard room matched the style of objects typically found at Scrimbia.
c
One such object was the sarcophagus stolen from the Church of San Saba in Rome, which had been consigned to Sotheby's in London by Editions Services (see p. 19).
d
The Brygos Painter flourished in Athens c. 490â470 BC and was a pupil of Onesimos.
f
In the catalog of the Passion for Antiquities exhibition, in relation to catalog number 126, the text of the Hercules reads as follows: “The superb illusionism of Second-Style Roman wall painting is brilliantly in evidence in this fragment from the upper zone of a Pompeian wall.” It continues: “The upper portion of the fresco matches precisely the upper portion of a fresco section in the Shelby White and Leon Levy Collection... and is from the same
room
as catalogue number 125” (italics added; see the Dossier section). Catalog number 125 was in fact another fresco fragment, consisting of two rectangular panels and showing landscape scenes bathed in a light blue-green hue. The text argues that, based on the right-to-left orientation of the shadows on the columns, “this was part of the right-hand wall upon entering the room.”
These two items recall the frescoes from the Pompeian villa that Pellegrini first encountered when delving into Medici's documentationâthey too were of the Second-Style (see p. 69).
We know that three walls were photographed by the tombaroli, but it is not clear if they are from the same villa. Only
parts
of three walls were recovered in Corridor 17, but if the building had dimensions as hinted at in the diagram on p. 71, many frescoes might still be missing.
g
See the Dossier section.
h
See Note, pp. 384â385.
j
The circumstantial evidence was that the buyer lodged a bid just above the reserve on each item and did not bid on any other items. Furthermore, the commission bid was lodged just minutes before the sale, and afterward, Sotheby's shipping department was instructed to send the purchases of Arts Franc together with the purchases of Editions Services to Arts Franc's address in Geneva.
s
See p. 26 and the Notes, p. 386.
u
Again, see p. 99 and 209.
v
See the Prologue, p. xvi.
aa
See p. 204 for the circumstances.
ab
The lost palace of King Sennacherib (704â681 BC) was rediscovered in 1847 by the British adventurer Austen Henry Layard. According to Genesis, Nineveh was among the first cities to be built after the Flood.
ae
In an interview with Peter Watson in London on February 6, 2006, Robin Symes said he had contributed $1 million to the Oxford Fellowship.
ag
The Kalmakarra Cave, known as the Western Cave, is located about nine miles northwest of Pol-e Dokhtar in Luristan, near the Iraq border. Several hundred objects are believed to have been looted and are now dispersed in Turkey, Japan, Britain, Switzerland, and the United States. In 1993, Turkish authorities seized a number of objects believed to belong to the treasure. One of the experts who examined the griffin noted its similarities to certain objects in the Miho Museum in Japan.
ah
See pp. 123â126 for a discussion of their quality and probable provenance.
ak
By now, Pellegrini had worked out that the organigram must have been written down sometime between 1990 and 1993. The chart showed Mario Bruno, of Lugano, on a secondary level, below Medici and Becchina but above the capi zona. By then, the investigators had established from other interviews and interrogations that Bruno had been a prominent figure in the antiquities underworld in the 1980s, almost on a level with Hecht, but had lost some of his influence since then, though no one knew why. Bruno died in 1993, so it follows that the organigram was compiled between these dates.
an
Nikolas Zirganos is an investigative reporter based in Athens. He works for
Kyriakatiki Eleftheroptypia
newspaper and
Epsilon
magazine.
ao
This perhaps also explained something that had puzzled Ludovic de Walden, the London lawyer for the Papadimitriou family. It was known that Christo always made notes using the yellow legal pads favored by American law firms. No notes of any kind by Christo, on yellow paper, were ever found among the archives, save for the one sheet written on in Symes's distinctive handwriting (see pp. 254â255). Is this what Symes was burning on Schinoussa?
ar
See the explanation for this above, p. 373.
Copyright © 2006, 2007 by Peter F. Watson and Cecilia Todeschini. Copyright © 2007 by Nikolas Zirganos for Chapter 21. Published in the United States by PublicAffairsâ¢, a member of the Perseus Books Group. All rights reserved.
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Paolo Ferri photo © Alberto Cristofari/A3/Contrasto/Redux.
All other photos courtesy of the authors and the Italian investigators.
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