The Heirs photograph

The Heirs

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Production location(s) South Korea
United States
Hangul왕관을 쓰려는 자, 그 무게를 견뎌라 – 상속자들
Networks SBS TV
Also known as The Inheritors
Dec 11, 2013
Here is another superb Korean drama. . . awesome cast having amazing plot . . Although a sad feeling runs through the . . .
Awards Baeksang Arts Award for Most Popular Female in Television
SBS Drama Award for Best Couple
SBS Drama Award for Top 10 Stars
SBS Drama Award for Most Popular Star
Korean Updates Awards for Most Favourite Couple
Baidu Feidian Awards for Best Asian Actor
SBS Drama Award for Best Dressed
SBS Drama Award for Top Excellence in Acting - Mid-length Series
KoreanUpdates Award for Grand Awards / Daesang for Drama
KoreanUpdates Awards for Best Actor
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID752918
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About The Heirs


After a chance encounter in LA, two teens from different social backgrounds reunite at an exclusive high school attended by Korea's super rich.

US returns Egon Schiele art stolen by Nazis to heirs

US returns Egon Schiele art stolen by Nazis to heirs
Sep 20,2023 9:51 pm

...By Nadine YousifBBC NewsThe US has returned seven artworks by Austrian painter Egon Schiele to The Heirs of a Jewish cabaret star who owned them before he was killed by the Nazis in 1941...

Gladstone family urged to pay slavery reparations to Jamaica

Gladstone family urged to pay slavery reparations to Jamaica
Aug 25,2023 8:10 pm

... Since then, some members of the family have joined The Heirs of Slavery, a group of British people whose families profited from the transatlantic slave trade and want to make amends...

Ed Sheeran wins Thinking Out Loud copyright case

Ed Sheeran wins Thinking Out Loud copyright case
May 4,2023 1:21 pm

... Keisha Rice, who represented The Heirs of Gaye s co-writer Ed Townsend said her clients were not claiming to own basic musical elements but rather " the way in which these common elements were uniquely combined...

They sold a Picasso to flee the Nazis - now their heirs want it back

They sold a Picasso to flee the Nazis - now their heirs want it back
Jan 26,2023 10:31 pm

... Now, The Heirs of the Adlers want the painting back...

Reliance Industries: Daughter rises in Mukesh Ambani's succession plan

Reliance Industries: Daughter rises in Mukesh Ambani's succession plan
Sep 19,2022 10:30 pm

... The bitter public battle for a board seat by Valli Arunachalam, one of The Heirs to the Chennai-based Murugappa Group, only underscores how difficult it is for Indian women to break through the glass ceiling...

Senior MPs take oath of allegiance to King Charles

Senior MPs take oath of allegiance to King Charles
Sep 10,2022 10:30 am

... The wording of the oath means MPs have already pledged their allegiance to The Heirs and successors of the Queen, meaning they do not have to do it again at this point...

Squid Game: The rise of Korean drama addiction

Squid Game: The rise of Korean drama addiction
Oct 17,2021 2:17 am

... Inheritors (for KUWTK fans)Figure caption, Warning: Third party content may contain advertsAlso known as The Heirs, Inheritors depicts the friendships, rivalries and love lives of young, rich heirs led by Kim Tan (Lee Min-ho) and a girl named Cha Eun-sang (Park Shin-hye)...

Transgender in Pakistan: the Maya, the woman who almost broke free

Transgender in Pakistan: the Maya, the woman who almost broke free
Feb 16,2020 9:34 am

... for years in Pakistan, The Heirs of the murdered person had the right to pardon the killer in exchange for blood money, an old Arab custom...

They sold a Picasso to flee the Nazis - now their heirs want it back

Feb 16,2020 3:11 am

By Robin Levinson-KingBBC News

In 1938, fearing for their lives amid rising Jewish persecution, Karl and Rosi Adler fled Nazi Germany for then-unoccupied Europe.

In order to pay for their short-term visas, they sold one of their prized Possessions - a 1904 painting by Pablo Picasso called Woman Ironing .

That painting eventually made its way into The Collection of the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum in New York City.

Now, The Heirs of the Adlers want The Painting back.

" Adler would not have disposed of The Painting at The Time and price that he did, but for the Nazi persecution to which he and His Family had been, and would continue to be, subjected, " lawyers for The Heirs wrote in a lawsuit filed in a New York City court last week.

Several Jewish organisations and non-profits are also named as co-plaintiffs in The Suit .

The Painting was originally bought from Heinrich Thannhauser in 1916, a Jewish Gallery Owner living in Munich at The Time .

When the Adlers fled Germany, they sold The Painting back to Thannhauser's son, Justin, who had already left the country for Paris, for approximately $1,552 (roughly $32,669 today, or £26,417).

That price, The Suit argues, was far below market Value - just Six Years before, Adler had offered The Painting for about $14,000, but decided not to sell it.

Soon after acquiring The Painting , Thannhauser insured it for $20,000.

Thannhauser left his large art collection to the Guggenheim when he died, including Woman Ironing . Prior to his death, as part of The Museum 's research process to confirm The Painting 's provenance, the Guggenheim reached out to Eric Adler, The Son of Karl and Rosi, The Museum said in a statement to The Bbc .

Mr Adler " confirmed the dates of his father's ownership, and did not raise any concerns about The Painting or its sale to Justin Thannhauser" and The Museum has repeatedly acknowledged The Elder Adler's previous ownership, The Statement said.

The Painting has stayed in The Collection to This Day , and went unchallenged by descendants of the Adlers for decades, until 2014, when the grandson of one of the Adler's other children, Carlota, learned about His Family 's history with The Painting .

For several years, lawyers for the Adler heirs and the Guggenheim went back and forth over who actually owned The Painting , which culminated in this lawsuit.

Guggenheim told The Bbc it " takes provenance matters and restitution claims extremely seriously" but " believes The Claim to be without merit".

What to do with artworks sold or looted during Nazi-era Germany has long been a concern. Many Jews and others fleeing persecution were forced to sell assets, including treasured works of art, in order to flee. Others had their artwork outright stolen.

In 1998, 44 nations signed the, which says that " steps should be taken expeditiously to achieve a just and fair solution, recognising this may vary according to the facts and circumstances surrounding a specific case".

Woman Ironing , however, should not be considered a piece of Nazi-Confiscated Art, the Guggenheim said.

The Painting was not sold in Germany, but after the Adlers had left, and it was sold to a Jewish art collector, not a member of the Nazi Party , The Museum noted.



Source of news: bbc.com

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