Ancient Roman Coins Found In Japanese Catle. Newslink.

sunnava gun.

I am disappointed in the lack of gold-pooping Japanese cows.

Me too! :slight_smile:

Very interesting but nothing about coins surprises me much. Coins are metal and metal has value - and value tends to move around somewhat. There were a small batch/hord of ancients found at a 1770s farm site in up-state NY 30some years back. Turns out the first European settler was Irish and probably brought them over with him. It’s happened enough to become a “plot” in various historical novels. Roman coins turning up in a place Japan is what raises this to the level of news for me.

When you read the story it becomes a lot less amazing. There were a total of ten ancient Roman coins found in a pile of coins - and most of the rest were coins from the Ottoman Empire. And some of the Ottoman coins in the pile were dated as “recently” as 1687.

This isn’t an ancient cache of coins from the first century.

The castle was only used until 1611, so the Ottoman coins indicate a post-occupation deposition of the hoard.

But on the other hand, the castle was only built in the 13th C. so waaay after Roman times. I’m pretty sure they ended up there the same way any hoard does - someone was trying to hide them. Likely they thought the empty castle/ruins were a good hiding place.

The biggest curiosity, for me, is that they are not precious metal coins (both the Roman and Ottoman coins look like copper alloy) which is just a weird thing to hoard in a relatively metal-scarce country where they have no value as specie. Maybe they were being kept as smelting stock.

How they got to Japan is harder to say, but probably via the China and the Silk Road, rather than European traders.

I don’t understand the logic here. If the country is relatively metal-poor, wouldn’t that make even base metal (copper or bronze) coins somewhat more valuable and thus more likely to be hoarded?

Likely. It should be noted that Roman coins are just as likely as Ottoman coins to end up in a far away land. They are equally as far away and Roman coins circulated in Europe and the Middle East long after the fall of the Empire.

Not really that surprising. Certainly less so than the recent news story about Chinese skeletons being found in a Roman cemetery in London. But even that might not be quite so simple as it first appears.

Beef Bullion…?

The ones in NY were mostly bronze as well. The speculation was that the silver and gold were converted to local value and those were the leftovers. The metal still had value (cooking pots and things around the house) especially on the frontier where metal was hard to find and could have been used as needed; smelted and recast/shaped. Since Japan was metal-scarce there still would have been more than fair value there - enough to justify hiding.

On the reverse side, have the ancient Chinese porcelain seals (as in wax seal impressing, not barking) found all over Britain ever been explained?

No, I’d have expected them to be melted down and made into articles the Japanese would actually consider more valuable than the constituent metal - and then that be hoarded.

1100+ years is quite a lot of “Long after”