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Honorable Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to India as also achieved the cultural milestone. As Netherlands has formally returned the historic 11th century Chola Copper Plates which is one of the most important surviving records of the Chola dynasty of South India. This will marks the end of successful effort of 14 years and brings the priceless artefacts return to India.
In a landmark cultural restitution, India has successfully secured the return of the Anaimangalam Copper Plates which is known internationally as the Leiden Plates.
These priceless artefacts had remained in the Netherlands for nearly three centuries.
This formal handover took place during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s official visit to Netherlands and making this a major diplomatic and cultural achievement.
The Chola Copper Plates are among the most valuable surviving historical records of the South India’s glorious Chola dynasty.
The Chola period’s returned artefacts includes the,
These inscriptions are date back to the reign of Emperor Rajaraja Chola I (From 985-1014 CE) and his son Rajendra Chola I.
The plates contains the inscriptions in both Tamil and Sanskrit, and it offers the rich details about governance, religious grants, land revenue rights and royal decisions.
One of the major inscription records Rajendra Chola I formalising a commitment originally made by his father.
These records are considered as the highly valuable because as they provide direct evidence of medieval India’s administrative systems.
The Chola Empire remains one of India’s most remarkable historical civilizations.
Its influence has also extended beyond India into Southeast Asia via trade, naval strength and cultural expansion.
The copper plates are historically significant because they documents the,
For the historians, these plates are not just artefacts but they are original archival records.
The historical records suggest the copper plates were taken to the Netherlands around the year 1712.
They were reportedly transported by the Mr. Florentius Camper who was associated with Christian missionary activity during the Dutch colonial control in Nagapattinam.
Later, in the 1862, the plates were donated to the Leiden University, where they remained preserved in the university library.
However the exact legal circumstances of how these artefacts left India is remain unclear.
To return the artifacts of Chola empire began in the year 2012. This process has gained the momentum in October 2023 when India formally raised this matter before the UNESCO’s Intergovernmental Committee for Promoting the Return of Cultural Property to its Countries of Origin (ICPRCP).
The UNESCO committee has acknowledged the India’s valid historical claim.
This opened the path for constructive discussions with Dutch authorities related to this matter.

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