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UK: While digging in backyard man unearths hoard of 20,000 Roman coins.
BBC On-Line ^
| Thursday, 11 March, 2004
| staff writer
Posted on 03/11/2004 9:12:07 AM PST by yankeedame
Last Updated: Thursday, 11 March, 2004, 11:45 GMT
Roman treasure found in pond dig
The coins are thought to date from the 4th century
A man unearthed a priceless hoard of 20,000 Roman coins as he dug a new fishpond in his back garden. Experts say the money may date from the 4th Century and could be the biggest find of its kind in Britain.
The coins were crammed into a ceramic pot which broke up as it was dug out of the ground at Thornbury, Gloucestershire.
Now a coroner must decide if Ken Allen, who made the discovery, can keep the treasure.
Gail Boyle, from Bristol Museum, said: "This is the most amazing find of treasure to come out of this area for 30 years."
Mr Allen said: "It was a great surprise and at first I didn't realise what we had found.
"The pot was perfectly upright, I can't believe that this discovery was only 20ft from our house."
"I can't believe that this discovery was only 20ft from our house,"- Ken Allen
Kurt Adams, the Finds Liaison Officer for Gloucestershire and Avon, said: "The coins identified so far can be attributed to Constantine the Great.
"The mint marks - a letter or symbol used to indicate the mint which produced the coin - suggest Trier, Germany and Constantinople as possible places of origin."
Treasure trove
The coins are in the care of Bristol City Museum & Art Gallery where they are being cleaned in a special laboratory.
They will then be taken to the British Museum in London for further examination.
A spokeswoman for Bristol Coroner's Court said that even though the coins were found on Mr Allen's property they could still be ruled as being property of the state.
"What determines this is if the coins were buried there intentionally or lost.
"It is possible somebody put them there and forgot about them, or never intended for them to be found.
"The coroner can rule whether they are the finder's treasure or not."
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: ancientrome; archeology; artifacts; coins; england; epigraphyandlanguage; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; history; privateproperty; propertyofthestate; propertyrights; romancoins; romanempire; treasure; uk
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To: ffusco
but I've also heard of many cases where treasure finders have legal claim to thier findings. I'm sure if that weren't the case, not too much treasure would ever be found.
To: yankeedame
"They will then be taken to the British Museum in London for further examination."
Like hell they will.
If, I found them on my property, and I dug them up, they are my property.
Now, for a few billion pounds they could go to London.
42
posted on
03/11/2004 9:43:55 AM PST
by
auggy
(http://home.bellsouth.net/p/PWP-DownhomeKY /// Check out My USA Photo album & Fat Files)
To: yankeedame
Looks like a pile of dirt and gravel to me. Hey! I think I may have dug up tons of ancient Roman coinage over the years and simply discarded them because my untrained eye thought they were a bunch of rocks. Damn!
43
posted on
03/11/2004 9:44:41 AM PST
by
rogers21774
(The guilty taketh the truth to be hard, for it cutteth them to the very center.)
To: AzSteven
When I wanted to build a house on undeveloped pristine riverside land a few years ago, before I was allowed to have a bulldozer in to dig the foundation, I had to have the site fully inspected by the Coastal Resources Management counsil, the Army Corp of Engineers, the Nature Conservacy, the Indian Artifact Society - just about everybody but the mastodon society. What a pain in the @ss
44
posted on
03/11/2004 9:44:47 AM PST
by
aShepard
To: Gorzaloon
"It would have taken him a long time for a little gain"
Might be the case, but I would rather wait a long time than to give it away to those that would steal it outright.
It is the principle of the thing with me. The money issue is secondary.
Blessings, Bobo
45
posted on
03/11/2004 9:45:25 AM PST
by
bobo1
To: yankeedame
Now a coroner must decide if Ken Allen, who made the discovery, can keep the treasure. Paging Dr. Quincy, please call Dr. Asten.
46
posted on
03/11/2004 9:48:19 AM PST
by
Yo-Yo
To: bobo1
Might be the case, but I would rather wait a long time than to give it away to those that would steal it outright. You are right. Were I to find artifacts, etc. while digging in my backyard, even if they were valueless, I would not make public announcments to The Authorities about them. Why, they had been in the family for GENERATIONS! Even before we brought them over with us on the Mayflower!
47
posted on
03/11/2004 9:50:48 AM PST
by
Gorzaloon
(Contents may have settled during shipping, but this tagline contains the stated product weight.)
To: SavageRepublican
Roman Coin ping
48
posted on
03/11/2004 9:52:36 AM PST
by
rface
(Ashland, Missouri -)
To: scan58
While it is possible these coins are the rare ones, I know I have seen coins like this in the local coin shop and they are probably far from "priceless". I bought several of them for very cheap. (not 20,000, however)We have some old Roman coins my brother bought from a coin dealer on the Internet.
They were not very expensive, I think he got 30 assorted coins for around $64.00.
What is cool about them is that even though they are not precious metal they actually are a part of history that you can own.
A few of the coins we have are from the time of Constantine. They have his inscription on one side and Romulus and Remus nursing from a wolf on the other.
One of the reasons that Roman coins are found buried like they were in this article is that Roman soldiers sometimes pooled there money together before a battle and buried it. Whoever was left alive after the battle could split the money.
Many times no one lived through the battle so the money stayed hid.
49
posted on
03/11/2004 9:58:21 AM PST
by
Stewart_B
( Fat, drunk, and stupid is no way to go through life, son. (Dean Wormer))
To: BadAndy
Don't be so sure. Britain enacted a Treasure Law in 1996. They have to go through some formalities (this inquest), and the national museums get first refusal to buy them at market value, but the guy will end up with the treasure. Metal detecting and treasure hunting is a big hobby in Britain, and amazing finds are showing up regularly. They've realized that if they don't insure people will get to keep the treasure legally, they'll just stop reporting their finds.
50
posted on
03/11/2004 10:02:02 AM PST
by
Heyworth
To: Gorzaloon
We are kindred spirits.
Blessings, Bobo
51
posted on
03/11/2004 10:02:35 AM PST
by
bobo1
To: cannothave2masters
If they took the coins they'd take the pottery too, you'd have the hole though. He may not even have that if the archeologists get the "right" to dig on his property.
52
posted on
03/11/2004 10:08:04 AM PST
by
weegee
('...Kerry is like that or so a crack sausage.')
To: countrydummy
Holy cow. This stash would pay for a fleet of new Minelabs, and a couple hundred backup Whites and Garretts!
53
posted on
03/11/2004 10:08:34 AM PST
by
glock rocks
(molon labe)
To: yankeedame
How do we know it was only 1 bucket ?
To: bobo1
Maybe they should give the coins to Ireland...
55
posted on
03/11/2004 10:12:18 AM PST
by
weegee
('...Kerry is like that or so a crack sausage.')
To: Swanks
Maybe he found 50,000 coins and, uh, said he found 20,000....
56
posted on
03/11/2004 10:14:42 AM PST
by
Guillermo
(It's tough being a Miami Dolphins fan)
To: weegee
Hi weegee,
Perhaps the leprachauns can multiply the bounty. Don't really know, cuz I do not get involved in such things.
I watch intently at the situation in Ireland. I pray for peace.
Blessings, Bobo
57
posted on
03/11/2004 10:17:26 AM PST
by
bobo1
To: yankeedame
Lesson: If you find coins, gold or a bag of money next to the road, keep ya mouth shut.
To: EagleMamaMT
He never did know how the Feds found out he had it. They showed up at his house about a week after he found it.Evidently he told at least one person...Nothing is truly secret if you tell anyone else!
59
posted on
03/11/2004 10:24:41 AM PST
by
JOAT
To: Vic3O3; cavtrooper21
Dang! Why doesn't something like this happen to me? If I go dig in the back yard all I ever excavate is the remains of yesterday's Iam's that the dogs have left me!
Semper Fi
60
posted on
03/11/2004 10:32:02 AM PST
by
dd5339
(Happiness is a full VM-II and a DEAD AND BURIED AWB!)
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