Read Saving Italy: The Race to Rescue a Nation's Treasures from the Nazis Online
Authors: Robert M. Edsel
HAVE YOU SEEN THESE WORKS OF ART?
T
he Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art continues the mission of the Monuments Officers by bringing visibility to cultural objects still missing from World War II and assisting those seeking to return such items. If you have information about a Monuments man or woman, or you possess a work of art, document, or other cultural item you believe was stolen or “liberated” during the war, please contact us at www.monumentsmenfoundation.org.
The following works of art are among the most prominent of the more than two thousand documented as stolen from Italy during the war.
1.
Raphael
Madonna of the Veil
Property of the Uffizi Gabinetto Disegni e Stampe, Florence
Stolen from Villa Reich, Barberino di Mugello
2.
Sandro Botticelli
Portrait of an Unknown Young Man
Property of the Filangieri Museum, Naples
Stolen from Villa San Paolo di Belsito, Nola
3.
El Greco
Copy of Correggio’s “Night”
Property of the Contini Bonacossi Collection
Stolen from Villa di Trefiano, Poggio a Caiano
4.
Peter Paul Rubens
Three Theological Virtues
Property of a Private Collection, Rome
Stolen from the EGELI (Institute for Management and Sale of Property, Ministry of Finance) Repository
5.
Hans Memling
Portrait of a Young Man
Property of the Uffizi Gallery, Florence
Stolen from Castello di Poppi
6.
Bernardo Bellotto
View of the Grand Canal in Venice
Property of the Borbone-Parma Collection
Stolen from Villa delle Pianore, Lucca
7.
Bernardino Luini
Madonna and Child and Sister Alessandra Bentivoglio
Property of The Filangieri Museum, Naples
Stolen from Villa San Paolo di Belsito, Nola
8.
Jan van Huysum
Vase of Flowers
Property of the Palatine Gallery, Pitti Palace, Florence
Stolen from Montagnana
9.
Pietro Rotari
Portrait of a Girl
Property of the Contini Bonacossi Collection
Stolen from Villa di Trefiano, Poggio a Caiano
10.
Unknown Salzburg Goldsmith
Gold Plated Silver Tray
Property of the Silver Museum, Pitti Palace, Florence
Stolen from the Abbey of Monte Cassino
MONUMENTS MEN AND
WOMEN SERVING IN THE
MEDITERRANEAN THEATER
Maj. Paul Baillie Reynolds, British
Maj. H. E. Bell, British
T/5 Charles Bernholz, American
Pfc. Paul O. Bleecker, American
Fanny Bonajuto, Italian
Maj. John Bromwich, British
Capt. T. Humphrey Brooke, British
Lt. Col. Stanley Casson, British (Killed in transit)
Maj. J. M. Cook, British
Squadron Leader Douglas Cooper, British
Lt. Comdr. Perry B. Cott, USNR, American
Capt. Edward “Teddy” Croft-Murray, British
S/Sgt. Nicholas L. Defino, American
Lt. Col. Ernest DeWald, American
Sgt. D. L. Donn, British
Lt. Glanville Downey, American
Lt. Col. Dunbabin, British
Capt. Roger H. Ellis, British
Capt. Rodrick E. Enthoven, British
Capt. Thomas Worden French, British
Maj. Paul Gardner, American
Lt. Col. Mason Hammond, American
Lt. Col. N. C. L. Hammond, British
Lt. Frederick Hartt, American
Sir Hilary Jenkinson, British
Pfc. R. J. Jennings, American
Maj. Deane Keller, American
Maj. Bancel LaFarge, American
Lt. Kenneth O. Lippman, American
Angelo P. Lucia
Capt. Basil Marriott, British
Capt. Fred H. J. Maxse, British
Capt. William D. McCain, American
Lt. Col. Norman T. Newton, American
Cpl. D. Pascale, American
S/Sgt. Bernard Mann Peebles, American
Capt. Albert Sheldon Pennoyer, American
Capt. Cecil R. Pinsent, British
Salvatore C. Scarpitta, American
L. A. Sheppard, British
Fred W. Shipman, American
Lt. Col. Theodore Sizer, American
Capt. G. F. T. Wagstaff, British
Lt. Col. John Bryan Ward-Perkins, British
Capt. Sidney Blehler Waugh, American
Lt. Col. Mortimer Wheeler, British
Cpl. Edward N. Willard, American
Lt. Col. Sir Leonard Woolley, British