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joi, 12 decembrie 2019

Comoara descoperită într-o mașină, în vama de la Porțile de Fier I

Poliţiştii de frontieră şi inspectorii vamali de la Porţile de Fier I au descoperit într-un autoturism o adevărată comoară despre care se presupune că face parte din patrimoniul național sârbesc.
Mai exact, polițiștii și vameșii au găsit 1.645 de monede, dar și alte obiecte vechi, bine ascunse în mașina condusă de un cetăţean sârb, care intenţiona să le introducă ilegal în România, potrivit unui comunicat al Poliției de Frontieră.
Obiectele arheologice se aflau în două cutii din carton sigilate cu bandă adezivă. Este vorba despre monede, diverse figurine sau părţi din figurine din ceramică şi metal, inele de diverse forme, ornamente metalice, a căror vechime urmează a fi stabilită de către experți.
Cele două cutii erau ascunse într-o valiză, printre alte lucruri.
Bunurile au fost ridicate de Poliţia de Frontieră în vederea continuării cercetărilor şi vor fi trimise pentru expertizare şi evaluare instituţiilor specializate. Cetăţeanului sârb, în vârstă de 69 de ani, i s-au întocmit documente premergătoare cercetării penale.
„Bunurile au fost ridicate în vederea continuării cercetărilor de Biroul Vamal Porţile de Fier I, iar poliţiştii de frontieră efectuează cercetări sub aspectul săvârșirii infracțiunii de introducerea pe teritoriul statului român, precum şi deţinerea, comercializarea, organizarea de expoziţii sau orice operaţie privind circulaţia bunurilor culturale imobile, care fac parte din patrimoniul cultural al unui stat străin, conform dispoziţiilor legale ale statului respectiv şi care au fost exportate ilegal conform art. 85, alin. 1, din Legea 182/2000 privind protejarea patrimoniului cultural naţional mobil, la finalizare fiind luate măsurile legale care se impun”, se precizează în comunicatul Poliției de Frontieră. sursa:


miercuri, 16 decembrie 2015

Comoara de pe strada Beau din Somerset

Au gasit englezii o comoara cu adevarat uriasa: 17500 monede romane din argint. Va lasam sa cititi articolul  si sa va minunati.
"The Beau Street Hoard, found in Bath, Somerset, is the fifth-largest hoard ever found in Britain and the largest ever discovered in a British Roman town. It consists of an estimated 17,500 silver Roman coins dating from between 32 BC and 274 AD. The hoard was found on Beau Street about 150 metres (490 ft) from the town's Roman Baths, built when Bath was a Roman colony known as Aquae Sulis.
It was discovered in 2008 by archaeologists from Cotswold Archaeology on the site of what is to be a new pool for the Gainsborough Hotel and Thermal Spa. It is the largest hoard ever found in the UK by a professional archaeologist. The coins were found fused together into a large block. It was secreted under the floor of a Roman building near the face of a masonry wall, within a small oval pit measuring about 40 cm × 30 cm (16 in × 12 in). The find's location makes it highly unusual, as hoards more typically come from rural locations. It was thought initially that the hoard comprised up to 30,000 coins but the estimated number was subsequently reduced to around 17,400. The hoard appears to have been deposited towards the end of the 3rd century AD; coins spanning a period from 32 BC to 274 AD have been identified by British Museum conservators.
When the hoard was discovered it was believed that it had been deposited in a wooden box which had since rotted away, but X-ray analysis of the block of coins by Southampton University has found that they had been stored in a number of leather bags. Six bags were visible on the X-rays, and two more were discovered as the hoard underwent conservation. Traces of the leather are still visible, having been partially protected from decay by contact with the copper coins, which repelled the bacteria that would otherwise have destroyed it. The bags contained the following:
  • One bag of denarii dating from 32 BC to the 240's AD (the oldest being a coin issued by Mark Antony that was already 300 years old at the time of its deposition), plus a handful of radiates from the 250's.
  • Four bags of high-silver radiates from the 3rd century, dating up to the 260's.
  • Three bags of debased (low-silver) radiates from the 3rd century, dating up to the 270's, consisting of coins which had been heavily debased (in some cases so much so that they were mostly bronze rather than silver).
It is not known why it was buried but the period was one of great turmoil, known as the Crisis of the Third Century, in which the Roman Empire nearly collapsed as Britain and Gaul broke away to form the short-lived Gallic Empire. There were 25 emperors in only 50 years. Such hoards are thought to have been deposited with the intention of being recovered later once the troubles had passed, but for whatever reason the owners were unable to do so. Nor is it known whether the hoard was deposited in one go in the 270's or whether it might have been built up over time. It appears to have been amassed over a period of several decades, perhaps being redeposited from somewhere else. The hoard represented a substantial amount of value, though the rampant inflation of the time would have eroded its worth rapidly. In the 230's it would have been equivalent to about the same as a year's pay for 18 Roman legionaries, but by 301 it would only have been the equivalent of two soldiers' annual salaries." continuarea pe:
 https://www.facebook.com/notes/shipwreckhunter/the-beau-street-hoard-of-england/
at the lab .. The Beau Street Hoard, found in Bath, Somerset, is the fifth-largest hoard ever found in Britain and the largest ever discovered in a BritishRoman town. It consists of an estimated 17,500 silver Roman coins dating from between 32 BC and 274 AD.


luni, 12 iulie 2010

Un tezaur de 52500 de monede romane descoperit in Anglia


52500 monede romane a descoperit un detectorist amator, in luna aprilie 2010, intr-un vas destinat stocarii cerealelor, ingropat undeva intr-un cimp de linga Frome, Somerset, in SV Angliei. Este unul dintre cele mai mari tezaure de moneda romana descoperit in Anglia. Monedele, majoritatea din secolul trei, sunt din argint si bronz. Norocosul, Dave Crisp a gasit intii 21 de monede si a chemat in ajutor arheologii pentru a dezgropa vasul in care erau restul de monede.
766 de monede au imaginea generalului roman Marcus Aurelius Carausius, cel care a condus Britania intre 286-293 si a fost primul imparat roman care a batut moneda in Britania.
Intregul tezaur cintareste circa 160 kg, iar valoarea monedelor gasite se ridica, la o prima estimare, la circa 1 milion de dolari. Tezaurul a fost preluat de British Museum unde monedele au fost curatate si inregistrate.