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Related: Culture Forums, Support Forums1,100-Year-Old Treasure Is Unearthed by Teenagers in Israel
The discovery of hundreds of gold coins dating to the ninth century could help archaeologists better understand the history of the region. The discovery offers proof of interactions between the Abbasid Caliphate and the Byzantine Empire, two rival powers of the time.https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/24/world/middleeast/israel-gold-coins-archaeology.html
The treasure needed to be secured. So the hoard of 425 gold coins was stowed in a clay jar, its lid secured with a nail, and stashed in the sands of what is now central Israel. It then sat undisturbed for more than 1,100 years, until last week, when two 18-year-olds taking part in an archaeological excavation by a hillside in Yavneh noticed something unusual.
I dug in the ground and, when I excavated the soil, saw what looked like very thin leaves, said Oz Cohen, one of the teenagers. When I looked again, I saw these were gold coins. It was really exciting to find such a special and ancient treasure. The teenagers were volunteers in a vast project linked to the construction of a community in Yavneh, south of Tel Aviv. The program offers the promise of connecting young people with history, and, while it is meant to be culturally rewarding, it is not often that someone strikes gold literally.
In fact, Robert Kool, a coin expert at the Israel Antiquities Authority, said the find was a rare treasure that could help archaeologists gain a deeper understanding of what was happening in the region at the time. The coins, which weigh less than two pounds and are made of pure gold, date to the ninth century, when the Abbasid Caliphate ruled a vast empire stretching from Persia in the east to North Africa in the west. The hoard consists of full gold dinars, but also what is unusual contains about 270 small gold cuttings, pieces of gold dinars cut to serve as small change, Mr. Kool said in a statement.
The cutting of gold and silver coins was a regular feature of the monetary system in Islamic countries after the 850s with the sudden disappearance of bronze and copper coins, he said. One of the cuttings unearthed last week, which Mr. Kool said had never before been found in excavations in Israel, included a fragment of a gold solidus coin of the Byzantine emperor Theophilos, who ruled from 829 to 842. Its appearance in an Islamic coin hoard offers proof of the continuous connections between the two rival empires during this period, scholars say. Whether it was through war or trade, money kept flowing.
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1,100-Year-Old Treasure Is Unearthed by Teenagers in Israel (Original Post)
Celerity
Aug 2020
OP
Fascinating...I wanted to be an archaeologist, but listened to my parents...mistake!
Karadeniz
Aug 2020
#1
Karadeniz
(22,543 posts)1. Fascinating...I wanted to be an archaeologist, but listened to my parents...mistake!
NCjack
(10,279 posts)2. There is no money in it.
flor-de-jasmim
(2,125 posts)3. I did, too. My father said that no one would
hire a woman because they'd have to make an additional bathroom!