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Chapter 253 Custody of Unearthed Cultural Relics (Monthly Ticket of 10,000 Characters)(2/2)

"Isn't donating something your duty as a citizen?" Xu Jiaqi said confidently.

"These things of mine, especially the Hongxian porcelain, are not considered heritage items. I wonder if I am qualified to donate them? You will not hand them over to me at that time. You will not even pay me for the salvage fee for fishing out these things.

Pay me?"

"Don't worry, the water you salvaged is not from our territory, nor is it from our waters. It should be considered a donation from you." Xu Xiangshan said.

Han Peacock was speechless, they really wanted to donate themselves.

"It's not impossible to donate, but I also have some conditions, such as a quota in a private museum and a nationally recognized research institute. Of course, I must have archaeological excavation qualifications. The most important thing is that I have

A private museum must have the same collection rights and collection rights as a public museum." Han Kongque said.

"This is impossible." Xue Jiaqi almost jumped up like a cat whose tail was stepped on. This Korean peacock really dared to speak loudly.

"Impossible? Nothing is impossible. According to current regulations, private museums and national museums are treated equally in a general sense.

As early as 2001, the "Capital City Museum Management Regulations" stipulated that both public and private institutions are public welfare institutions of the country. They all enjoy the country's preferential policies for public welfare institutions.

For collections that are not expressly prohibited by national laws, regardless of whether they are state-owned or private, they enjoy the same right to collect and collect.

Currently, only rare animals, cultural relics, fossils of ancient vertebrates and other items that countries have clearly stipulated in laws are prohibited from exporting, trading, and excavation. The collection policies for private and national museums are now different, and everything else should be the same.

.

It's just that this part of the power seems to have always been in the hands of public museums. Private museums have not been developed. If you can get me a quota, everything can be discussed."

Originally, Han Peacock was not sure whether the country would actually issue such quotas. After all, such a matter had been discussed in the country for more than ten years, but the recent report by Yue Muling made Han Peacock feel hot.

Because Yue Muling instigated Han Kongque to go archeology, he naturally wanted to have a serious background. If he didn't have that right, he would be robbing tombs.

Domestic tomb robbing is not as cool as what is written in novels. It is a fatal thing. If you really do it, it will be stained for life, and you may be subject to government dictatorship at any time.

Unexpectedly, when Yue Muling investigated, he discovered that private museums could also obtain rights to archaeological excavations. In this way, Han Peacock would naturally know exactly what the private museum that Chen Jiayi and the others had created was.

If such a right can really be obtained, then the private museum of Han Peacock will also have the right to conduct archaeological excavations of domestically unearthed cultural relics, and even set aside some of them for research.

Of course, it would be better if he had the right to collect and collect all, so that he could keep all his archaeological gains in his own museum. Although the trade of these collections will be restricted, future transactions in this area will definitely be restricted.

open.

If the purpose of establishing a private museum is to increase value, it is best not to establish a museum, because museums are still public welfare undertakings in our country.

The purpose of building a museum is to expand the scope of education and do some public welfare work for the country through education. The country will also provide you with some public welfare benefits, such as tax exemptions and other preferential policies.

In fact, running a museum is an undertaking that requires high investment. Maintaining the daily operations of the museum and upgrading the collections require a lot of funds. Therefore, it is unrealistic to run a museum for the purpose of profit.

Cultural relics regulations stipulate that the sale of cultural relics collections in nationally owned museums, libraries and other units is prohibited. Do private museums also need to abide by such regulations?

Since all collections in state-owned museums are state-owned property, no buying or selling is allowed within the collection series.

Because there was no such thing as private museums in the past, the regulations were mainly targeted at the National Cultural Relics Museum.

Because no matter whether it is a corporate or private museum, it cannot always be in and out. It must have a replacement, update and improvement of its collections.

It is impossible for a museum to have a lot of funds to carry out unlimited acquisitions. It must have in and out to maintain the continuous updating and improvement of collections.

After the collection is collected, if you can collect better cultural relics of the same type, you can follow certain procedures to replace the past collection. After the replaced collection is approved, you can dispose of it yourself after it is withdrawn from your collection.

, the disposal channel must of course be a circulation channel permitted by national law.

It is still illegal for private individuals or companies to directly collect cultural relics from the public, because the "Cultural Relics Protection Law" stipulates that unearthed cultural relics belong to the state and cannot be circulated. If there is a sale of unearthed cultural relics, it is a violation of the current "Cultural Relics Protection Law"

Specified.

After being unearthed, a small part of the unearthed cultural relics can be kept in scientific research units and excavation units if they are used for scientific research, while the rest are designated by the state and sent to state-owned museums.

If the state expands the scope of museums designated to collect unearthed cultural relics, some private museums can also host and preserve unearthed cultural relics on behalf of the state, so that private museums, which are also public welfare undertakings, also have the right to protect important cultural relics.

Now, what Han Kongque wants is the ownership of these unearthed cultural relics. Even if he cannot buy or sell them, he can still get the right to keep them.

Xu Xiangshan also said just now that it is impossible, not impossible, so this is just an unspoken rule within their industry. The state has liberalized this part of the authority, but as a public museum, it certainly does not want to add some to itself.

Competitors.

However, the actions of domestic public museums should have reached a bottom line. Their inaction and sitting on the benefits have reached a shameless level.

It's not that they don't know about many underground cultural relics, it's that they don't want to know. Only when the tomb robbers are rampant digging again and again, and the digging is really beyond sight, will they carry out rescue excavations. If anyone asks, they can only

Explain it with the sentence "lack of funds".

Since you think there is insufficient funds, let units and individuals with sufficient funds do the work. Therefore, private museums have entered the government's sight.

The reason why Chen Jiayi and others established a private museum was because of the liberalization of policies in this area.

Now, Han Kongque also knows this information, so he naturally doesn't want to let this opportunity go.
Chapter completed!
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