ArrowArtboardCreated with Sketch.Title ChevronTitle ChevronIcon FacebookIcon LinkedinIcon Mail ContactPath LayerIcon MailPositive ArrowIcon Print
Arts

China's Mongolian culture wars backfire in France

How Beijing tried to suppress an exhibit on Genghis Khan's legacy

Items on display at "Genghis Khan: How the Mongols Changed the World," being held from Oct. 14, 2023, to May 5, 2024, at the Nantes History Museum in France. (Nikkei montage/Source photos by Erdennechuluun Purevjav & Nemekhbayar Nadpurev Collection, Mongolia; Chinggis Khaan National Museum, Ulaanbaatar; David Gallard/LVAN)

NANTES, France -- Bertrand Guillet, director of the Nantes History Museum in the western French city, was shocked by the news he received from China in 2020. It was not about COVID-19, but an inexplicable demand from a partner museum in northern China. It said the artifacts it was sending to Nantes for an exhibition on Genghis Khan, the 13th-century Mongol emperor, could be displayed only if he or the empire he established was not mentioned.

There was no room for negotiation. After years of research and preparation for the museum's exhibition in the imposing castle that once belonged to the Dukes of Brittany, Guillet decided he had no choice but to call the whole thing off.

Sponsored Content

About Sponsored Content This content was commissioned by Nikkei's Global Business Bureau.

Nikkei Asian Review, now known as Nikkei Asia, will be the voice of the Asian Century.

Celebrate our next chapter
Free access for everyone - Sep. 30

Find out more