One cannot help but smirk at the latest cultural debacle to issue from the boot of Europe: the restoration of a Roman-era bull mosaic in Milan has descended into farce, leaving Italians bemused and, in a twist that would have Gibbon spinning in his grave, ‘UK heritage experts’ have been summoned to salvage the situation. The mosaic, a relic of the Roman Empire’s glory, now resembles a cartoon bovine rather than a majestic beast. It is a perfect metaphor for our times: a civilization that cannot even preserve its own ruins without turning them into kitsch.
Let us not be coy. The botched restoration is not merely an accident. It is a symptom. We live in an age of intellectual decadence where technical skill is subordinated to the whims of amateurs and bureaucrats. The mosaic, originally a testament to Roman agricultural wealth and power, has been ‘improved’ by restorers who apparently looked at a 2,000-year-old artwork and thought: ‘You know what this needs? A dash of Disney.’ The result is an embarrassment, a travesty that would have made the classical world weep. And so, in an irony too rich to ignore, the British—whose own heritage has been similarly ravaged by clueless modernisers—are called in to offer advice.
But what advice can they offer? The same nation that gave us the Millennium Dome, that allowed the brutalist concrete monstrosities of the 1960s to deface its cities, that turned its cathedrals into tourist traps? The UK’s heritage establishment is no less infected with the virus of professional incompetence and bureaucratic meddling. The very idea that ‘experts’ can be parachuted in to fix what is fundamentally a cultural and spiritual failure is laughable. The problem is not a lack of know-how; it is a lack of reverence.
Consider the parallels. In the late Roman Empire, the state became obsessed with preserving old monuments—not out of genuine piety, but as a hollow gesture to a fading glory. The result was a deluge of cheap, gaudy imitations. Sound familiar? Today’s restoration fiasco is the direct descendant of that same hollow impulse. We cannot recreate the grandeur of the past because we no longer understand it. We see a bull and think of a logo. The Romans saw a god, a symbol of vitality and earth. The difference is the chasm between a living culture and a dead one.
And yet, there is something strangely apt about the British being called in. It speaks to a deeper failure of national identity. The Italians, who once led the world in art and architecture, now look to a nation of shopkeepers and heritage theme parks for guidance. This is not collaboration; it is capitulation. The EU’s vision of a homogeneous, technocratic culture has succeeded where barbarians failed: it has turned the treasures of the past into commodities to be managed by committees.
What is to be done? Perhaps we should leave the mosaic as it is, a perfect testament to our age’s inability to honour its ancestors. Or perhaps we should commission a new restoration, but this time by artists who understand that a bull is not just a shape, but a statement. Let the mosaic stand as a warning: you cannot preserve what you do not love. And you certainly cannot fix a loss of faith with a team of experts from across the Channel. The Fall of Rome took centuries. The fall of Milan’s bull took only a few months. We are living in the end times of Western civilization, and it is apparently going to be tacky.








