An honest Estonian rewarded with nearly 100,000 euros for a pot of silver ancient coins he found last year. His identity was not made public. He turned in a treasure of more than a thousand ancient silver coins he dug up in a field in Estonia and got his reward on Thursday, when the Estonian government decided to give him nearly 100,000 euros.
"Under Estonian law, a person who finds and turns over ancient treasure to the authorities is entitled to the half of its value," the Estonian government said on its website.
"An expert study by Estonian heritage authorities found the treasure is worth 198,126 euros ($273,000)," it said.
"Most of the nearly thousand years old coins; (80 percent of them) are from Germany and the rest from England, Sweden, Denmark and Hungary. One silver coin seems to be from Italy," Mauri Kiudsoo, a Tallinn University expert, told reporters in the Estonian capital Thursday.
The man made the rare discovery on August 16 last year while digging in a farmer's field near Tallinn. The treasure, contained in a broken clay pot, comprised 1,329 silver coins and nine other silver items. The find came three years to the day after the previous such discovery in Estonia, when five treasure hunters discovered a trove of almost 1,000 coins, mostly from the 17th century, on Saaremaa Island off the west coast. They were rewarded with 32,650 euros for handing in the money from Sweden, Germany and the Netherlands.
Estonia Map by Wikipedia.
"Under Estonian law, a person who finds and turns over ancient treasure to the authorities is entitled to the half of its value," the Estonian government said on its website.
"An expert study by Estonian heritage authorities found the treasure is worth 198,126 euros ($273,000)," it said.
"Most of the nearly thousand years old coins; (80 percent of them) are from Germany and the rest from England, Sweden, Denmark and Hungary. One silver coin seems to be from Italy," Mauri Kiudsoo, a Tallinn University expert, told reporters in the Estonian capital Thursday.
The man made the rare discovery on August 16 last year while digging in a farmer's field near Tallinn. The treasure, contained in a broken clay pot, comprised 1,329 silver coins and nine other silver items. The find came three years to the day after the previous such discovery in Estonia, when five treasure hunters discovered a trove of almost 1,000 coins, mostly from the 17th century, on Saaremaa Island off the west coast. They were rewarded with 32,650 euros for handing in the money from Sweden, Germany and the Netherlands.
The recent introduction of the Estonia's euro coin has sparked controversy after it was claimed that a map of the tiny Baltic country on the new Estonian one euro coin appears to include a chunk of neighbouring Russia.
Source: AFP.
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