In February 2026, the British Museum confirmed it had begun removing and updating references to "Palestine" in its ancient Middle East galleries following a formal complaint from UK Lawyers for Israel (UKLFI).
UKLFI argued that using "Palestine" for ancient periods (2000–300 BC) was "historically inaccurate". The museum apparently agrees with them, admitting that it had mislabelled these items for so long, another slipup by the beleagered institution. The BM is now updating information panels and maps, including changing a panel about the Hyksos people from "Palestinian descent" to "Canaanite descent".
Reportedly,
UKLFI identified a number of maps displayed in the British Museum’s Egypt galleries[...] [that] label the area of modern-day Israel as “Palestine”. [...] According to UKLFI, this wording wrongly applies a much later geographical term to an earlier historical context. [...] UKLFI argues that retroactively applying the name “Palestine” across thousands of years creates a false impression of historical continuity and erases the emergence and existence of Jewish kingdoms and Jewish national identity in the region.
Further concerns were raised about the placement of mid-20th-century dolls described as wearing “Palestinian traditional dress” within the Museum’s Ancient Levant gallery. UKLFI says that displaying modern artefacts in this context risks implying an uninterrupted cultural lineage that is not historically accurate [eh? PMB]. UKLFI pointed out that these curatorial choices are not only misleading for the general public but also deeply troubling for Jewish and Israeli visitors. UKLFI states that the terminology used may create a hostile or offensive environment and could amount to harassment under the Equality Act 2010, which prohibits harassment related to protected characteristics including race, religion and philosophical belief.
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| Map of Palestine and the Holy Land published in Florence around 1480 in an edition of Ptolemy's Geographia. Israel is not on this map. |
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| British Palestine, the land where Kathleen Kenyon dug and where the new state of Israel later was created |
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| 1732 The British Museum was established only in 1753. |
How much are the Israeli/Jewish lawyers contributing to the costs of all this relabelling?
In other news, the entire collection of finds from Sutton Hoo is now about to be relabelled under the Museum's new policy, rather than coming from any part of England, it is now assigned to the Ēastengla Rīċe.
References
Craig Simpson, 'British Museum removes ‘Palestine’ from ancient Middle East displays' The Telegraph 14 February 2026.
AA 'British Museum removes 'Palestine' from displays after pro-Israel pressure', en.yenisafak.com, 15/02/2026, Sunday AA
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