Skip to main content
12 events
when toggle format what by license comment
7 hours ago comment added Neil Tarrant If you believe that Greece are the rightful owners, why do you call them the 'Elgin' marbles, and not the 'Parthenon' marbles? The British Museum themself do not refer to the collection as the Elgin Marbles on their webpage: britishmuseum.org/collection/galleries/greece-parthenon
10 hours ago history became hot network question
10 hours ago history edited Rick Smith CC BY-SA 4.0
Removed repeated word.
10 hours ago history edited NoDataDumpNoContribution CC BY-SA 4.0
cut one sentence in two and set questions on their own paragraph
S 10 hours ago history suggested Kate Gregory CC BY-SA 4.0
clarified "one argument"
12 hours ago review Suggested edits
S 10 hours ago
17 hours ago comment added Whiter Fox @ItalianPhilosopher the British Museum has 2 primary arguments against the return of the Elgin Marbles.The other I am not talking about is that a return would set a precedent for similar cases around the globe and it could create a domino effect where all such cultural objects should be returned to the rightful owners.
yesterday comment added Italian Philosopher How about "What are the British museum's arguments for not returning the Elgin Marbles?". +1 otherwise, keeping other countries' cultural artifacts without permission is not really all that cool.
yesterday answer added ccprog timeline score: 5
yesterday answer added o.m. timeline score: 11
yesterday history edited Rick Smith CC BY-SA 4.0
added 53 characters in body; edited tags
yesterday history asked Whiter Fox CC BY-SA 4.0