Quote:
...these findings represent the first of this kind in the Land of the Pyramids...
...these findings represent the first of this kind in the Land of the Pyramids...
I suspect many, many more gold coins of Valens have been found in Egypt down through the years. They're not particularly scarce coins, as late Roman gold coins go; the illustrated type is listed in my old 1981 edition Sear as #4005 and valued at £225, and there's a nice one for sale on FORVM right now for just under US$2000. Egypt was one of the wealtheir Roman provinces, and it was under Valens' direct control throughout his reign. No reason for there to be a shortage of these coins there.
This may well be merely the first one found by an official, legal, government-sponsored archaeological dig. As far as these archaeologists are concerned, any privately owned or privately discovered coins "don't count". It's precisely this attitude that the author of this article is complaining about.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
























