German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann who, in 1873, illegally smuggled from Turkey to Athens the Early Bronze Age hoard of precious metalwork known as "Priam's Treasure," which he had discovered. Blake, Emma; Emma Blake; Arthur Bernard Knapp. The archaeology of Mediterranean prehistory. Wiley-Blackwell. 2005: 307 [2009-08-27]. ISBN 978-0-631-23268-1.
"In 2012, Latchford was identified in [US] federal court records as a middleman in the trafficking of looted antiquities from Southeast Asia. Authorities allege Latchford knowingly purchased two looted Khmer sculptures from “an organized looting network” and conspired with the London auction house Spink to obtain false export permits for them. The case was a civil lawsuit, and Latchford was not charged with a crime. But after a lengthy legal battle, Sotheby’s agreed to return its sculpture to Cambodia. Soon after, the Norton Simon Museum, Christie’s auction house and the Metropolitan Museum of Art all returned sculptures tied to Latchford." Chasing Aphrodite: "The Kushan Buddhas: Nancy Wiener, Douglas Latchford and New Questions about Ancient Buddhas" (originally posted 1 February 2015) (页面存档备份,存于互联网档案馆)
“Turkish Invasion and Cyprus Occupation”. Press and Information Office, Republic of Cyprus. CyprusNet.com. 2005. Web. 12 February 2012. < Turkish Invasion and Cyprus Occupation. [2011-01-05]. (原始内容存档于2011-07-08).>.
Peter Bruhn: Beutekunst – Trophy Art. Bibliography of the international literature on the fate of the cultural treasures displaced as trophies by the Red Army from Germany to the USSR in the result of World War II and situated now on the territory of the Russian Federation and other republics of the former Soviet Union. 4th edition. München: Sagner, 2003. In an updated version also available as bibliographical database Beutekunst - Трофейное искусство - Looted Art / Trophy Art. [2007-06-27]. (原始内容存档于2007-06-27).
Schliemann illegally smuggled the treasure to Berlin, convinced he had found evidence of the Iliad's famed ancient city.Top 10 Plundered Artifacts – Priam's Treasure. www.time.com. March 5, 2009 [2009-08-27]. (原始内容存档于March 10, 2009).
"The last king of Poland was Stanisław August Poniatowski. His royal throne, or mainly its backrest, was decorated with eagles beautifully embroidered in gold and silver, symbolizing Poland. When the Germans seized Warsaw in World War II, the governor of German-occupied Poland ordered the eagles taken down and presented to German officers as a souvenir." Danuta Szmit-Zawierucha. Following in the Footsteps of Kings. www.warsawvoice.pl. 20 September 2006 [2009-04-14].
“Turkish Invasion and Cyprus Occupation”. Press and Information Office, Republic of Cyprus. CyprusNet.com. 2005. Web. 12 February 2012. < Turkish Invasion and Cyprus Occupation. [2011-01-05]. (原始内容存档于2011-07-08).>.
Peter Bruhn: Beutekunst – Trophy Art. Bibliography of the international literature on the fate of the cultural treasures displaced as trophies by the Red Army from Germany to the USSR in the result of World War II and situated now on the territory of the Russian Federation and other republics of the former Soviet Union. 4th edition. München: Sagner, 2003. In an updated version also available as bibliographical database Beutekunst - Трофейное искусство - Looted Art / Trophy Art. [2007-06-27]. (原始内容存档于2007-06-27).
Schliemann illegally smuggled the treasure to Berlin, convinced he had found evidence of the Iliad's famed ancient city.Top 10 Plundered Artifacts – Priam's Treasure. www.time.com. March 5, 2009 [2009-08-27]. (原始内容存档于March 10, 2009).
"In 2012, Latchford was identified in [US] federal court records as a middleman in the trafficking of looted antiquities from Southeast Asia. Authorities allege Latchford knowingly purchased two looted Khmer sculptures from “an organized looting network” and conspired with the London auction house Spink to obtain false export permits for them. The case was a civil lawsuit, and Latchford was not charged with a crime. But after a lengthy legal battle, Sotheby’s agreed to return its sculpture to Cambodia. Soon after, the Norton Simon Museum, Christie’s auction house and the Metropolitan Museum of Art all returned sculptures tied to Latchford." Chasing Aphrodite: "The Kushan Buddhas: Nancy Wiener, Douglas Latchford and New Questions about Ancient Buddhas" (originally posted 1 February 2015) (页面存档备份,存于互联网档案馆)