The State Department and US Customs have imposed import restrictions on behalf of Tunisia’s increasingly authoritarian government that cover an exceptionally broad range of archaeological (dating from approximately 200,000 BC to 1750 AD) and ethnological (from approximately 1574 AD to 1881 AD) materials. Items listed include religious artifacts, coins and even rope!
The restrictions on ethnographic materials at least implicitly apply to the cultural heritage of Tunisia’s displaced Jewish minority population. These restrictions recognize the rights of the Tunisian State to the ownership and control of such artifacts despite a history of religious discrimination aimed at the country's remaining Jews, and virulent antisemitism exemplified by the recent attack on one of the country’s few remaining synagogues.
The restrictions on coins apply to a wide variety of ancient, medieval and early modern coins to 1750 AD, including Carthaginian types which also circulated elsewhere in North Africa, Spain and Italy:
10. Coins—This category includes coins of Numidian, Carthaginian (sometimes called Punic), Roman provincial, Vandal, Byzantine, Islamic, Norman, and Ottoman types that circulated primarily in Tunisia, ranging in date from the fifth century B.C. to A.D. 1750. Numidian, Roman provincial, and Vandal coins were made primarily in bronze, though some Numidian and Vandal types occur also in silver. Carthaginian types occur in electrum, a natural pale yellow alloy of gold and silver. Local Byzantine and later coin types were made in copper, bronze, silver, and gold. Coins may be square or round, have writing, and show imagery of animals, buildings, symbols, or royal figures.
These latest overbroad import restrictions on coins again points to the need for collectors to ask their member of Congress to cosponsor HR 7865, legislation to facilitate the lawful trade in ancient, medieval, and early modern coins.
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