Algeria recovers Ottoman-era rifles going up for auction in UK
Algerian authorities on Sunday said they recovered seven Ottoman-era rifles just before they were going to be up for auction in theUK.
The Algerian culture ministry said in a that it worked with the foreign ministry to retrieve the rifles that date back to Ottoman rule of Algeria, which lasted between 1516 and 1830.
The weapons were scheduled to be sold at "an electronic auction" inLondon, just before "the Algerian state intervened to retrieve them", the culture ministry said.
تمكنت من استرجاع 7 بنادق أثرية، بعد أن كان معروضة للبيع في مزاد إلكتروني بالعاصمة البريطانية ..
— الشروق Echorouk (@echoroukonline)
The weapons are "of great archaeological and artistic importance", the ministry said,and will be included in national museum collections.
In April last year,Algiers announced the recovery of a rare Islamic manuscriptthat also dated back to the Ottoman era.
The manuscript had beenseized by French colonial authorities in 1842, during a raid against notable military leader Emir Abdelkader.
Some of modern-day Algeria wasunder Ottoman control for over 300 years, in a territory known as theRegency of Algiers.
This lasted until 1830, when the area was colonised by the French.
The Regency was established by Ottoman Admiral Hayreddin Barbarossa, after he and his brothercaptured Algiers from the Spanish. He then declared himself Sultan.