Thursday, November 30, 2023

Discovery! Scuba diver discovers 30,000 well-preserved Roman coins off Italian coast

It's astounding to think that if you go scuba diving off the coast of Italy, you could find 30,000 coins from Ancient Rome with legible inscriptions, including dates and faces. That's what happened to one lucky diver. Here's the story from Livescience.
 

(Photo: A handful of the ancient bronze coins discovered by a diver in Sardinia. Image credit: Italian Ministry of Culture)

Scuba diver discovers 30,000 astonishingly well-preserved Roman coins off Italian coast

The well-preserved bronze coins found off the coast of Sardinia could be linked to a shipwreck.

LIVESCIENCE By Jennifer Nalewick , NOV 14, 2023

A diver exploring the waters off Sardinia in Italy has discovered tens of thousands of Roman-era bronze coins hidden in the seagrass.

The man immediately contacted the authorities about the finding, which was near the town of Arzachena. Based on the location of the hoard, experts think the cache could be connected to an undiscovered shipwreck, according to a translated statement by Italy's Ministry of Culture.

(Photo:  Panoramic view of Porto Cervo, Arzachena, Sardegna. Credit: Italy Magazine)

Initial weight estimates put the hoard at between 30,000 and 50,000 pieces. Only four were damaged, but even these contained legible inscriptions, including dates and faces.

Further examination by archaeologists revealed that the folles, a type of large coin used in the Roman and Byzantine empires, were minted sometime between A.D. 324 and 340 and were in an "exceptional and rare state of preservation," according to the statement.

The coins were in circulation during Roman Emperor Constantine the Great's reign, which lasted from A.D. 306 to 337.

(Image: Red colored island is Sardinia, Italy. Credit: Britannica)

"The treasure found in the waters of Arzachena represents one of the most important discoveries of numismatic finds in recent years and highlights once again the richness and importance of the archaeological heritage [at] the depths of our seas," Luigi La Rocca, general director of archaeology, fine arts and landscape for the Mediterranean island, said in the statement.

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