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A 2,500-year-old golden helmet stolen from a Dutch museum has been returned to Romania. The artifact was recovered by Dutch authorities and presented at the National Museum of Romanian History in Bucharest.
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Dacian gold items, a 2,500-year-old helmet and wristbands, stolen from a museum in the Netherlands and then recovered by Dutch authorities, are presented during a press conference after being returned, at the National Museum of Romanian History, in Bucharest, Romania, Tuesday, April 21, 2026. Andreea Alexandru/AP
Andreea Alexandru/AP
BUCHAREST, Romania — A priceless golden helmet dating back 2,500 years was returned to Romania on Tuesday after the national heirloom was stolen from a Dutch museum where it was on loan last year.
The golden helmet was stolen from a Dutch museum and has now been returned to Romania after being recovered by Dutch authorities.
The helmet was returned to Romania on April 21, 2026.
The helmet was presented at the National Museum of Romanian History in Bucharest.
Dutch authorities were involved in the recovery of the stolen golden helmet.

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The ornate Cotofenesti helmet and three golden bracelets — some of Romania's most revered national treasures from the Dacia civilization — were taken from the Drents Museum in January 2025 in a raid which shocked the art world and devastated Romanian authorities.
But after 14 months of investigations, diplomatic tensions, and three suspects in an ongoing trial, most of the artifacts arrived at Bucharest Henri Coanda International Airport on Tuesday from where authorities transported them under guard to Bucharest's National History Museum. They were displayed in a glass cabinet, flanked by masked, armed guards.
Cornel Constantin Ilie, the museum's interim director, said that the artifacts have been returned "not as simple patrimony items, but as relics of our historical memory, as the legacy of a civilization that continues to define us."
"For us, this is a moment of joy, but also of contemplation," he said. "For months, we have lived with the fear that part of our past could be lost forever. Today we can say that an essential part of this treasure has returned."
Robert van Langh, the Drents Museum director, described the recovery and return of the relics as "an emotional moment for all involved," and acknowledged "the grief, the anger and now the relief have naturally been even greater" in Romania than in the Netherlands.
"Romanian national heritage has returned home," he said. "The impact of this robbery was already significant in the Netherlands, but here it must have been truly unparalleled … The police and judicial authorities of both countries have done extraordinary work."
Dutch prosecutors unveiled the recovered items at a news conference in the eastern Dutch city of Assen earlier this month. The whereabouts of the third golden bracelet remains unknown, but van Langh vowed the search would continue and that a judicial verdict is expected in the coming weeks.

Journalists gather around a glass enclosure with the Dacian gold items, a 2,500-year-old helmet and wristbands, stolen from a museum in the Netherlands and then recovered by Dutch authorities, after they were presented upon being returned at the National Museum of Romanian History, in Bucharest, Romania, Tuesday, April 21, 2026. Andreea Alexandru/AP
Andreea Alexandru/AP
During its disappearance, the golden helmet was slightly dented, while the recovered bracelets were in perfect condition.
Romania's Minister of Culture Demeter Andras Istvan said the return of the artifacts had shown "how strong the connection between heritage and collective consciousness can be."
"This entire episode reminds us at the same time how exposed heritage can be. It can be exposed to violence, illegal trafficking, negligence, oblivion," he said.
After the raid, Dutch authorities were left with grainy security footage of three people wrenching open a museum door with a crowbar, after which an explosion was seen. Before its recovery, there were fears the helmet may have been melted down because its fame and distinctive appearance made it virtually unsellable.
The artifacts will be exhibited to the public in Bucharest before undergoing some restoration work, the museum's interim director said.
"We believe that the public has the pleasure of celebrating them ... not only as splendid objects, but as a witness to an ordeal, an almost irreparable loss, and a return that we owe to the operation between institutions and the perseverance of the authorities," he said. "Today, these treasures returned home."