Bucharest, Romania — A priceless 2,500-year-old golden helmet was returned to Romania on Tuesday after the national heirloom was stolen from a Dutch museum, where it was on loan last year.
The ornate Kotofenesti helmet and three golden bracelets – some of Romania’s most coveted national treasures from the Dacian civilization – were Retrieved from Drents Museum in January 2025 In a raid that stunned the art world and devastated Romanian authorities.
But after a 14-month investigation, diplomatic tension and three suspects on trial, most of the artefacts arrived on Tuesday at Bucharest Henri Coanda International Airport, from where authorities transported them under guard to Bucharest’s National History Museum. They were displayed in a glass cabinet, flanked by masked, armed guards.
Cornel Constantin Ilie, the museum’s interim director, said the artifacts were returned “not as ordinary ancestral objects, but as relics of our historical memory, the heritage of a civilization that continues to define us.”
“For us it is a moment of joy, but also of reflection,” he said. “For months we have been living with the fear that a part of our past could be lost forever. Today we can say that an important part of this treasure has returned.”
Robert Van Lange, director of the Drents Museum, described the recovery and return of the remains as “an emotional moment for everyone involved” and acknowledged that “the sadness, the anger and now the relief have naturally been even greater” in Romania than in the Netherlands.
“Romanian national heritage has returned home,” he said. “The impact of this robbery was already significant in the Netherlands, but here it must have been truly unique… The police and judicial authorities of both countries have done an extraordinary job.”
Dutch prosecutors unveiled the recovered items at a press conference in the eastern Dutch city of Assen earlier this month. The whereabouts of the third golden bracelet are unknown, but Van Lange vowed that the search would continue and expected a judicial decision in the coming weeks.
The golden helmet was slightly dented during its disappearance, while the recovered bracelets were in perfect condition.
Demeter Andras Istvan, Romania’s culture minister, said the return of the artifacts showed “how strong the connection between heritage and collective consciousness can be.”
He said, “This whole episode reminds us at the same time how exposed heritage can be. It can face violence, illegal trafficking, neglect, oblivion.”
After the raid, Dutch authorities were left with grainy security footage of three people opening the museum doors with a crowbar, followed by an explosion. Before its recovery, there were fears that the helmet might have been melted down as its fame and distinctive appearance made it almost unsellable.
The museum’s interim director said the artefacts would be displayed to the public in Bucharest before some restoration work was carried out.
“We believe that the public enjoys celebrating them… not only as spectacular objects, but as witnesses to an ordeal, an almost irreparable loss, and a return that we get because of the operations between the institutions and the perseverance of the authorities,” he said. “Today, these treasures returned home.”
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McGrath reported from Leamington Spa, England.
