Quoted by Heritage Dilly; A group of climbers discovered a 5-kilogram treasure in the southern slope of the Zoychina Hill in the Tour-e-Moustak area of ”Třebihošť-Mostek” in the Republic. The treasure, located in two secret containers behind a handmade stone wall, was immediately delivered to the museum.
The collection consists of 2 gold coins wrapped in a black fabric, a delicate woven silver bag and gold -coated objects, including 2 bracelets, 2 cigarettes, a chain -attached key, and a cosmetics powder box.
According to Mirslavo Novak, head of the archaeological department of the East Bohemia in Hradia Králové “, the discovery is not only due to its significant weight but also due to its relatively new age. Novak says:
Burial has an ancient history; From the ritual of pre -history to the protection of capital during the turbulent historical period.
Unlike ancient treasures whose motivation to bury is generally in a state of uncertainty, treasures related to the relatively modern ages provide more extensive historical studies opportunities, as researchers can reconstruct the burial narrative using archive documents.
Coins analysis shows that their multiplication date varies from 1 to 2 years, but some coins have small stamps that have been added after World War I. According to Novak, some coins have been minted in the former Yugoslavia in the 1980s and 1980s; This clue implies that the treasure was buried shortly after year 2.
Most of the coins are made in France, and the rest are from the Austrian-Hijra, Belgium and Ottoman Empire. The interesting thing is that not even one coin from Germany or Czechoslovakia was found among them; A subject that deepen the secret of the identity of people and the motivation of burial treasure.
The East Bohemia Museum considers this complex one of the most important treasures discovered in the contemporary history of the Czech Republic, as it establishes a tangible link with the social and economic context of central Europe in the early twentieth century.
RCO NEWS