In 1902, German researchers Albert Grünwedel, Theodor Bartus and Albert von Le Coq travelled more than 6,000 kilometers from Berlin to explore the magnificent murals painted inside the caves of the Turfan region, in present-day China.
Before the outbreak of World War I, they decided to send wall paintings and sculptures from this "Cave of the Ring-bearing Doves" to Germany, justifying the move as a "rescue operation," as an article from the Berlin State Museums' archives described it.
The materials they brought back with them from the fifth and sixth centuries contained many secrets. In 2017, a team from the Asian Art Museum in Berlin set out again on the northern Silk Road to explore them further. In the meantime, the parts of the "Cave of the Ring-bearing Doves" from Kizil that had made it to Berlin have been lavishly restored and can be viewed in the new Humboldt Forum as a walk-in cave.
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