Middle schooler finds coin from Troy in Berlin
Posted by speckx 19 hours ago
Comments
Comment by hecturchi 18 hours ago
Unfortunately bronze, with trimmed edges, common mint and worth very little. But if you tell me someone just stumbles onto and old coin in the street just lime that, I pretty much believe it.
Comment by hypendev 3 hours ago
Turns out, years later, they excavated a roman villa there. Funnily enough, the same beach has roman villas, dinosaur prints, austro-hungarian tunnels and yugoslavian bunkers. Quite a lot of history in one pretty beach.
Comment by TeMPOraL 35 minutes ago
Comment by SoftTalker 17 hours ago
Comment by eszed 15 hours ago
Comment by bombcar 17 hours ago
Comment by genxy 16 hours ago
Comment by eszed 15 hours ago
Comment by WalterGR 5 hours ago
For the unaware, Steve Wozniak buys sheets of uncut $2 bills and spends them. He’ll walk into a location and tear off a $2 bill like a serrated coupon.
There’s probably a better link but this was at hand: https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/steve-wozniak-2-dollar-bil...
Comment by SoftTalker 7 hours ago
Comment by cxr 12 hours ago
I don't believe that they've been anywhere nearly as much of "a pain to spend" for you as you're stating. You're just gabbing.
Comment by eszed 7 hours ago
Comment by bombcar 15 hours ago
(IIRC some businesses used to give change in $2 to show their "influence" on the area.)
Comment by lostlogin 9 hours ago
Comment by traderj0e 16 hours ago
Only time I ever got rare money was a buffalo / Indian head nickel as change in a cafe very recently, not a valuable form though.
Comment by jethkl 12 hours ago
I found a bill from the Weimar hyperinflation era. Its face value was several billion (Milliarden). Its only value was as a curiosity.
Comment by tomcam 7 hours ago
Comment by dhosek 15 hours ago
Comment by incanus77 12 hours ago
Comment by nickpinkston 14 hours ago
Per his Wikipedia:
"In 1874 Schliemann published Troy and Its Remains. Schliemann at first offered his collections, which included Priam's Gold, to the Greek government, then the French, and finally the Russians. In 1881, his collections ended up in Berlin, housed first in the Ethnographic Museum, and then the Museum for Pre- and Early History, until the start of WWII.
In 1939, all exhibits were packed and stored in the museum basement, then moved to the Prussian State Bank vault in January 1941. In 1941, the treasure was moved to the Flakturm located at the Berlin Zoological Garden, called the Zoo Tower. Dr. Wilhelm Unverzagt protected the three crates containing the Trojan gold when the Battle of Berlin commenced, right up until SMERSH forces took control of the tower on 1 May.
On 26 May 1945, Soviet forces, led by Lt. Gen. Nikolai Antipenko, Andre Konstantinov, deputy head of the Arts Committee, Viktor Lazarev, and Serafim Druzhinin, took the three crates away on trucks. The crates were then flown to Moscow on 30 June 1945, and taken to the Pushkin Museum ten days later. In 1994, the museum admitted the collection was in their possession."
Comment by nephihaha 1 hour ago
Comment by lordleft 19 hours ago
Comment by lamasery 19 hours ago
Comment by kirubakaran 17 hours ago
Comment by schoen 14 hours ago
Comment by satvikpendem 13 hours ago
Comment by redsocksfan45 16 hours ago
Comment by bombcar 17 hours ago
Comment by exitb 18 hours ago
Comment by arethuza 18 hours ago
Comment by globnomulous 13 hours ago
Comment by detourdog 18 hours ago
Comment by riffraff 15 hours ago
Comment by singularity2001 5 hours ago
Comment by thehours 18 hours ago
Edit: this was also mentioned in the article
Comment by aaronharnly 12 hours ago
Comment by spauldo 9 hours ago
Comment by nephihaha 1 hour ago
There were also nomads, pilgrimages (as some have said), and African swallows.
Comment by olalonde 17 hours ago
Comment by ButlerianJihad 9 hours ago
In fact this is exactly the same situation which drives pro-Israel sentiment in modern times: pilgrimage == tourism == $$$.
Comment by gostsamo 18 hours ago
Comment by Gormo 16 hours ago
So "yes", then.
Comment by sidewndr46 17 hours ago
Comment by Tuna-Fish 14 hours ago
Young kings showing their piety by restoring old monuments was useful royal propaganda. This wasn't even the last time that the Sphinx was restored.
Comment by ocschwar 14 hours ago
And the Neo-Babylonian Empire had the first tourism minister taking care of a paleo-Babylonian site.
Comment by alephnerd 18 hours ago
Heck, Inuit had Chinese bronze artifacts [0] well before European contact (basically 4,000 miles).
[0] - https://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/archive/releases/2016/Q2/old...
Comment by nephihaha 1 hour ago
Comment by cachius 17 hours ago
Comment by codensolder 1 hour ago
Comment by nephihaha 1 hour ago
Comment by brailsafe 16 hours ago
Link should be updated to this.
Comment by tsoukase 12 hours ago
Comment by AlotOfReading 12 hours ago
I wouldn't jump immediately to modern collector, nor does the article.
Comment by lostlogin 9 hours ago
They don’t think it a modern loss.
https://greekreporter.com/2026/04/16/ancient-greek-coin-troy...
Comment by jb1991 14 hours ago
Comment by jjk166 14 hours ago
It's the same reason paleontologists can go back to the same places every year and find new fossils, or farmers keep having to remove stones from their fields.
Comment by cammasmith 18 hours ago
Comment by petepete 2 hours ago
That's roughly when The Mayflower set off, and St Peter's Basilica was built. And it's still a working pub, open every day.
Comment by SoftTalker 18 hours ago
Comment by robot-wrangler 17 hours ago
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winnemucca_Lake [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirit_Cave_mummy#Dating
Comment by AlotOfReading 17 hours ago
For another example, most neighborhoods in eastern phoenix are built on top of old Hohokam villages, adjoining older basketmaker sites. The canals throughout the city often follow the old Hohokam canals. Fun fact, the Intel Chandler campus is on top of old hohokam suburbs of Pueblo de los muertos, which is buried under the modern suburbs.
Comment by refurb 5 hours ago
The Puye Cliff Dwellings are over 1,000 year olds, and you can free roam most of them. It is quite wild being able to go into cave dwellings in the cliff. I'd highly recommend visiting if anyone is considering it.
Comment by alephnerd 17 hours ago
Comment by sidewndr46 16 hours ago
Comment by alephnerd 16 hours ago
It felt like a mix of rightful wariness due to untrustworthy opportunistic anthropologists from the 19th and 20th century along with taboos that developed due to some sort of collapse.
Comment by dhosek 15 hours ago
Comment by dylan604 17 hours ago
Comment by louky 17 hours ago
Comment by tiagod 17 hours ago
Comment by danans 15 hours ago
In the US you can find truly wild places, but it is pretty hard to find places untouched by man. Humans have been here for at least 15000 years, and from the very beginning were having huge impacts on the ecology.
Comment by nonameiguess 17 hours ago
Comment by traderj0e 16 hours ago
Comment by cardiffspaceman 15 hours ago
There is also a district of the city that contains NIMBYs and other fossils, by a similar name.
Comment by unsignedchar 15 hours ago
Comment by ranger_danger 17 hours ago
Comment by Clamchop 17 hours ago
Comment by angst_ridden 11 hours ago
(La Brea means "the tar").
A bit west of downtown, too, but I'm an annoying pedant.
Comment by ButlerianJihad 12 hours ago
Comment by rtkrni 18 hours ago
Comment by roelschroeven 18 hours ago
""After we understood where it came from, I had the task of figuring out where this coin was found exactly. Fortunately, the boy was very precise and showed me exactly where he found it on a map. Then we went into our findings registration and found that this agricultural site was actually a well-known place," Henker explained.
Berlin'sMuseum for Pre- and Early History has been systematically conducting surveys on empty land in Berlin since the 1950s to determine where possible excavation sites might be.
In this particular spot, explains Henker, the upper layers of the soil were surveyed in the 1950s and 70s and again later. "Every time, they discovered a few distinct finds that made them say 'ok, there's probably more in the ground here'."
Over the years, fragments of ceramics, Slavonic-era knives and a bronze button have been unearthed on the site, as well as burnt human bones, leading researchers to conclude that this are was used as a burial ground dating as far back as the early Iron Age — and has been in use throughout the centuries."
Comment by roelschroeven 18 hours ago
The field was found to be a multi-layered historical site, containing Bronze Age and Iron Age burial remains, Roman-era artifacts, and even a medieval Slavic knife fitting. This “archaeological context” suggests the coin likely arrived in the region centuries ago, rather than falling out of someone’s pocket last week."
If I get that right, the student somehow managed to find the coin in a field, and after archaeologists started digging and found a whole historical site.
Since the location is a field, I imagine the coin had come to the surface when the farmer was plowing the field, or something like that. Still, why was the student walking in a field? Germans are known for going on walks, but why in a field? Was he or she in the field with the express purpose of trying to find something interesting, maybe even using a metal detector? Or was it a purely accidental find?
Comment by FlyingSnake 14 hours ago
Comment by zadikian 18 hours ago
https://greekreporter.com/2026/04/16/ancient-greek-coin-troy...
Comment by AdmiralAsshat 17 hours ago
Comment by RyanOD 18 hours ago
Comment by Tuna-Fish 14 hours ago
In most civil law countries, everything always has a legal owner (usually reverting to the state when no other legal owner can be found), and if you just "find" something and take it, you have committed theft. In Germany, the antiquities law is clear that anything of significant historical value belongs to the state, with a monetary reward possible for the finder in some situations (and finding something and not reporting it is a crime). If an old coin is deemed to not be historically significant, it probably belongs to the landowner.
Comment by Archelaos 6 hours ago
According to § 984 BGB, a historically insignificant find belongs to the finder and landowner in equal shares.[1] If the find is so important that it is considered a "cultural monument" (Kulturdenkmal), the law of the individual German state determines who owns it and whether or how much of a compensation is payed to the finder.[2]
[1] https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/bgb/__984.html (in German)
[2] For details see https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schatzregal#Deutschland (in German)
Comment by adriand 18 hours ago
Comment by e-dant 12 hours ago
Comment by agentifysh 14 hours ago
Comment by BobbyTables2 16 hours ago
Comment by jb1991 15 hours ago
Comment by danans 18 hours ago
Heh, some things never change.
Comment by mc32 17 hours ago
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Comment by brcmthrowaway 17 hours ago
Comment by traderj0e 16 hours ago
Comment by tremon 16 hours ago
Comment by QuercusMax 17 hours ago
Comment by lukan 15 hours ago
The flat area of Berlin on the other hand, had human settlement since 60 000 years.
Comment by QuercusMax 14 hours ago
Comment by lukan 3 hours ago
Yes, but there were definitely whole areas not habited for quite some time .. likely reason, climate change! (It got colder at that time)
Comment by tdiff 13 hours ago
Comment by nemo 13 hours ago
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Comment by nemo 6 hours ago
Comment by simonreiff 13 hours ago