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"National treasures" worth $11 million stolen from museum in France in the middle of the night

  • On September 4, 2025, three valuable porcelain items, collectively estimated at around 9.5 million euros, were stolen from a national museum located in Limoges.
  • The suspects forced entry by smashing a window, triggered the alarm around 3:15 a.m., and fled before police arrived, prompting a prosecutor investigation.
  • The stolen items comprise two significant Chinese porcelain dishes dating back to the late medieval period and an 18th-century vase, all recognized as national treasures.
  • Mayor Emile Roger Lombertie suggested that the thefts may be orchestrated by collectors who are collaborating with organized criminal groups.
  • The heist highlights ongoing challenges as French museums experience repeated major thefts, suggesting a need to review security systems and investigate organized crime links.
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Lean Left

Two Chinese porcelain bowls and a vase were taken from a French museum.

Lean Left

There is a vase and two plates missing, total value: 6.5 million euros. In the French Limoges art thieves have succeeded in a spectacular coup. Apparently, the gangsters were enough to open a window.

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franceinfo.fr broke the news in on Thursday, September 4, 2025.
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