Current Events > German dude discovers literal 2,000 year old buried treasure.

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UnfairRepresent
01/15/22 9:13:29 AM
#1:


A volunteer archaeologist has discovered an ancient stash of Celtic coins, whose "value must have been immense," in Brandenburg, a state in northeastern Germany.

The 41 gold coins were minted more than 2,000 years ago, and are the first known Celtic gold treasure in Brandenburg, Manja Schle, the Minister of Culture in Brandenburg announced in December 2021.

The coins are curved, a feature that inspired the German name "regenbogenschsselchen," which translates to "rainbow cups." Just like the legend that there's a pot of gold at the end of a rainbow, "in popular belief, rainbow cups were found where a rainbow touched the Earth," Marjanko Pileki, a numismatist and research assistant at the Coin Cabinet of the Schloss Friedenstein Gotha Foundation in Germany, who studied the hoard, told Live Science in an email.

Another piece of lore is that rainbow cups "fell directly from the sky and were considered lucky charms and objects with a healing effect," Pileki added. It's likely that peasants often found the ancient gold coins on their fields after rainfall, "freed from dirt and shining," he said.

The hoard was discovered by Wolfgang Herkt, a volunteer archaeologist with the Brandenburg State Heritage Management and Archaeological State Museum (BLDAM), near the village of Baitz in 2017. After Herkt got a landowner's permission to search a local farm, he noticed something gold and shiny. "It reminded him of a lid of a small liquor bottle," Pileki said. "However, it was a Celtic gold coin."

After finding 10 more coins, Herkt reported the discovery to the BLDAM, whose archaeologists brought the hoard's total to 41 coins. "This is an exceptional find that you probably only make once in a lifetime," Herkt said in a statement. "It's a good feeling to be able to contribute to the research of the country's history with such a find."

By comparing the weight and size of the coins with those of other ancient rainbow cups, Pileki was able to date the hoard's minting to between 125 B.C. and 30 B.C., during the late Iron Age. At that time, the core areas of the Celtic archaeological culture of La Tne (about 450 B.C. to the Roman conquest in the first century B.C.) occupied the regions of what is now England, France, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, southern Germany and the Czech Republic, Pileki said. In southern Germany, "we find large numbers of rainbow cups of this kind," he noted.

However, Celts did not live in Brandenburg, so the discovery suggests that Iron Age Europe had extensive trade networks.

Of the 41 gold coins, 19 are coins known as staters, which have a diameter of 0.7 inches (2 centimeters) and an average weight of 0.2 ounces (7.3 grams), and 22 are 1/4 staters, which have a smaller diameter of 0.5 inches (1.4 cm) and an average weight of 0.06 ounces (1.8 g). The entire stash is imageless, meaning they are "plain rainbow cups," said Pileki, who is also a doctoral candidate of archaeology of coinage, money and the economy in Antiquity at Goethe University, Frankfurt.

Because the coins in the stash are similar, it's likely that the hoard was deposited all at once, he said. However, it's a mystery why this collection the second largest hoard of "plain" rainbow cups of this type ever found ended up in Brandenburg.

"It is rare to find gold in Brandenburg, but no one would have expected it to be 'Celtic' gold of all things," Pileki said. "This find extends the distribution area of these coin types once again, and we will try to find out what this might tell us that we did not yet know or thought we knew."

Full Aticle: https://www.livescience.com/celtic-gold-hoard-discovered-germany

https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/a/user_image/2/6/7/AAZiH8AACzwL.jpg

Did you see those Celt traders?

They have curved gold.

Curved Gold!

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MI4 REAL
01/15/22 9:14:27 AM
#2:


That gonna get "confiscated" for sure.

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"Er...well, y'know. You can't make an omelette without um...destroying a forest.....or something" -Black Mage
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Southernfatman
01/15/22 9:15:02 AM
#3:


MI4 REAL posted...
That gonna get "confiscated" for sure.


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When I sin I sin real good.
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Dathrowed1
01/15/22 9:17:24 AM
#4:


Those were someone's Lucky Charms

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knightmarexx
01/15/22 9:32:42 AM
#5:


MI4 REAL posted...
That gonna get "confiscated" for sure.

I remember a news story about two people in the UK, who sold some Treasure Trove items on the blackmarket.
They interviewed an expert after it was all exposed, and he literally said "I don't understand why they went to all this trouble to do it illegally - if they're done all legally, they'd have made a lot more money - and not facing charges...."
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MI4 REAL
01/15/22 10:01:32 AM
#6:


I heard a story about someone appraising the validity of 4 gold coins worth about $88M dollars.

The government confiscated them because of a 1930s law that banned people from owning gold.

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"Er...well, y'know. You can't make an omelette without um...destroying a forest.....or something" -Black Mage
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teep_
01/15/22 10:07:30 AM
#7:


MI4 REAL posted...
That gonna get "confiscated" for sure.
It was never his to begin with. The authorities dug out most of the coins

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