Posted on 07/28/2011 8:31:25 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
...The hoard of copper alloy coins, dating from the 3rd Century, was unearthed in Montgomery, Powys, several weeks ago.
About 900 were found by a member of a Welshpool metal detecting club, with the rest of the discovery made with help from archaeologists.
The exact location is being kept secret to protect the site. The Powys coroner will determine whether they qualify as treasure.
Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust (CPAT), which helped unearth the coins, said the discovery had the potential to reveal more about Roman life in mid Wales in the late 3rd Century.
The find in Montgomery is a few miles away from where a Roman fort once stood in the village of Forden...
"This was probably a time of considerable political and economic unrest and the coins may have been buried for safekeeping with the intention of returning for them in the future. Unfortunately for the original owner, but happily for us, for some reason they never had the chance to recover them."
(Excerpt) Read more at bbc.co.uk ...
Adrian Simmons (R) found some of the coins using a metal detector
The top of the ceramic pot in which many of the coins were found buried
So THAT’S where I lost them.
At last, Obama’s solution to the debt crisis.
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Where YOU lost them?
I beg to differ, that’s where I secured them for safekeeping. :-)
I should really start using my two nice White’s Metal Detectors...
Back off you two. Those are MINE.
some lucky stiff is gonna find a similar stash 1000 years after I’m dead...
I have come to the conclusion therefore that the currency of that time was NOT very valuable. From what I know of that period, the debasement of Rome's currency was at its worst during the 3rd century. Like the penny jar you keep on your dresser, I suspect that these coins had lost much of their purchasing power due to debasement and inflation, so burying them in the yard or basement was no big deal. See below chart.
Was Obama running things back then too?
“At last, Obamas solution to the debt crisis.”
No; Obama is Superman. He only needs 2 coins:
http://www.cnn.com/2011/OPINION/07/28/balkin.obama.options/index.html
I did a double-take when I saw the title. Montgomery Field is a little airport in San Diego County. Wonder how ancient coins could end up there?
Arthur’s hoard?
The Roman Empire had an ongoing political crisis, and that brought about all the other problems. Money wasn’t one of them.
Oh how I would love to go to Rome and dig for bottles.
More likely it was buried to escape tax collector/seizures and/or bandits/burglars.
It was quite the agrarian lifestyle, and I would speculate that most of the hovels would be vacant while the family was out working the fields, tending the live stock, etc.
And the owners probably were killed in accidents or by robbers, or dropped dead of one natural thing or another.
My brother buried a quart jar full of dimes in the early 1940s and was unable to locate them later. I suppose they're still in the same location.
Sez who?
LOL good one.
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