EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: The hacked off head of a stolen statue has been found in the Earl of Pembroke’s home
With its immense 'Double Cube' room filled with priceless Van Dycks and opulent State Rooms dotted with Rembrandts, it is no wonder that Wilton House, the ancestral seat of the Earl of Pembroke in Wiltshire, has featured in film and television productions from the Madness Of King George. to De Kroon.
But the next appearance could take place in a completely different and grim genre: that of true crime.
This surprising possibility is the result of a decapitation way back in 2007, in a garden about 1,200 miles from Wilton – in Rome, to be precise.
The head in question came from a mercilessly lifeless body: that of a beautiful marble statue of Bonus Eventus, the Roman god of fortune.
Before the beheading it was 6 feet tall. And until it was sold by the 15th Earl of Pembroke in 1961, it had stood in Wilton for over 200 years, following its acquisition by the 8th Earl in the 18th century.
Before the beheading it was 6 feet tall. And until it was sold by the 15th Earl of Pembroke in 1961, it had stood in Wilton for over 200 years, following its acquisition by the 8th Earl in the 18th century.
The discovery was made even more remarkable by the fact that the catalog in question came from 'The Sculpture Collection of Wilton House'. Somehow the head of Bonus Eventus had 'gone home' (photo Wilton House)
The distraught owners alerted the police in Rome. But whoever cut off the head was never caught; nor did its owners – the same family that bought it from Wilton – have any idea where the head was located. Until now.
Italian dealers, who later bought the mutilated statue, recently put it up for sale for £850,000. Before doing so, they researched its history – and came across a photo of the head in a catalog published in 2020. The author of the catalogue, Professor Peter Stewart, of the University of Oxford, is not authorized to comment. “I'm afraid I'll just have to refer you to Wilton House,” he tells me.
But the Estate Office tells me that they too are 'not allowed to comment'.
However, I understand that the head was reacquired by Wilton in 2011 after it surfaced at auction in Cologne and was listed as coming from a 'French private collection'.
I look forward to the head hackers being exposed soon.
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