Yahoo – AFP,
18 Feb 2015
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A handout
picture released by Israel's Antiquities Authority shows some of the gold
coins
recently found on the seabed in the ancient harbour in Caesarea (AFP Photo)
|
Jerusalem
(AFP) - Scuba divers have discovered the largest trove of gold coins ever found
off Israel's Mediterranean coast -- about 2,000 pieces dating back more than
1,000 years, the country's antiquities authority said Tuesday.
"The
largest treasure of gold coins discovered in Israel was found in recent weeks
on the seabed in the ancient harbour in Caesarea," the authority said in a
statement.
It was by
pure chance that members of a diving club in the Roman-era port had come across
the coins, which the authority said weighed nine kilograms (almost 20 pounds)
but described as "priceless".
"At
first they thought they had spotted a toy coin from a game and it was only
after they understood the coin was the real thing that they collected several
coins and quickly returned to the shore in order to inform the director of the
dive club about their find," it said.
Experts
from the authority called to the site uncovered "almost 2,000 gold coins
in different denominations" circulated by the Fatimid Caliphate, which
ruled much of the Middle East and North Africa from 909 to 1171.
Kobi
Sharvit, director of the marine archaeology unit at the Israel Antiquities
Authority, said excavations would be carried out in the hope of shedding more
light on the origin of the treasure.
"There
is probably a shipwreck there of an official treasury boat which was on its way
to the central government in Egypt with taxes that had been collected,"
said Sharvit.
"Perhaps
the treasure of coins was meant to pay the salaries of the Fatimid military
garrison which was stationed in Caesarea and protected the city.
"Another
theory is that the treasure was money belonging to a large merchant ship that
traded with the coastal cities and the port on the Mediterranean Sea and sank
there," he said.
The Israeli
Antiquities Authority declined to put a cash value on the coins, which it said
had been exposed as a result of winter storms.
The find
was "so valuable that its priceless," spokeswoman Yoli Schwartz told
AFP, adding the haul was now the property of the state, and that there was no
finder's fee.
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