A big discovery of historical silver cash has been made on the Mediterranean island of Pantelleria, situated between Sicily and Tunisia. Archaeologists from the College of Tübingen, Germany, unearthed 27 Roman silver cash, often called “denarii,” courting again greater than 2,000 years. The cash had been discovered hidden in a gap within the wall throughout excavations on the Acropolis of Santa Teresa and San Marco. A few of these cash characteristic a human head profile, which stays unidentified.
Pirate Assault Concept
It’s believed that the cash had been hidden throughout one of many many pirate raids that plagued the area round 94 to 74 B.C., a interval when the Roman Republic dominated. The invention was made after earth from the positioning slipped following wet climate, revealing a part of the stash. The remainder of the cash had been discovered underneath a boulder. In response to archaeologist Thomas Schäfer, the cash could have been hid by locals throughout a pirate assault.
Pirates often raided coastal areas throughout the jap Mediterranean till the Roman normal Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, often called Pompey the Nice, defeated them in 67 B.C.
Roman Ruins and Earlier Discoveries
The invention of those cash occurred close to an earlier discover – the heads of three Roman statues. These marble heads included portrayals of Julius Caesar, Emperor Titus (who dominated from A.D. 79 to 81), and a lady who might be Agrippina the Elder, the granddaughter of Augustus, or Antonia the Youthful, daughter of Mark Antony.
The archaeological web site, as soon as a Roman settlement often called Cossyra or Cossura, stays untouched by looters and options an meeting space often called a “comitium.” Solely 5 such places have been present in Italy, making this a big and well-preserved discover.