In 1955 the Director Peter Megaw established the Archaeological Survey Branch, known also as Cyprus Survey, and appointed Hector Catling as the head, Kyriacos Nicolaou as an Assistant and a number of technicians.[4] The Branch was downgraded after the 1974 war[5] and dissolved in 1979.[6] In 1979 a position for traditional architecture and folk art was created.[6]
Until 1960 the conservation works focused only on monuments dating to antiquity, the Byzantine and Medieval period. Since then there have been restoration of Ottoman, British Colonial and Traditional monuments.[7]
From 1935 until the 1st of July 2023 the Department operated under the Ministry of Transport, Communications and Works, until its transfer in the newly created Deputy Ministry of Culture.[8]
Repatriation of Artifacts
The Department of Antiquities has been successful in repatriating stolen Cypriot artifacts from abroad. In 2023, 80 artifacts were returned from the United States, including items covering a wide range of Cypriot history. Additionally, 36 artifacts were repatriated from Australia, involving collaborations with the Australian government and academic institutions.[9][10]
Digitisation Initiatives
The Department has launched a comprehensive digitisation programme named "Digitising the Museums of Cyprus," funded by the European Economic Area Financial Mechanism and Norway Grants. The initiative aims to digitise 96,000 artifacts from various museums across Cyprus to enhance the management and accessibility of Cyprus's cultural heritage.[11]
Legislation
The first Antiquities Law of 1905, which was amended by in 1927 and then replaced in 1935, with the formal establishment of the Department. The 1927 law allowed partage, giving one third of the excavated material to the archaeologist, a third to the owner of the excavated land (which was usually bought by the archaeologist), and a third to the Cyprus Museum. The law allowed for the export of antiquities, two thirds of the excavated material of the Swedish Cyprus Expedition were used as one of the foundational collections of the Medelhavsmuseet.[12]
The Department publishes since 1915 the Report of the Department of Antiquities, Cyprus (RDAC) as well as the Annual Report of the Director of the Department of Antiquities Cyprus (ARDAC). The ARDAC for the years 2006-2009 can be accessed online. Additionally, it publishes its own excavations.
Organisation
The department is headed by the Director of the Department of Antiquities, next in line is the position of the Director of the Cyprus Museum and following that, the Curator of Monuments.