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Gold Coins Of Emperor Valens Found In Egypt

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bobby131313's Avatar
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 Posted 05/29/2008  11:22 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add bobby131313 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Gold-Coins-Of-Emperor-Valens-Found-In-Egypt
Gold coins of Emperor Valens found in Egypt

Egypt's massive storage of artifacts still buried underneath of a pellicle of sand and soil is daily investigated by archaeologists. Indefatigable researches are conducted to extract history from beneath, to find clues on a nation's past and to restore World history.

And thanks to its immense archaeological materials, scientists regularly unearth new items who change more or less our understanding of this great ancient civilization.

The Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities announced an interesting discovery. Gold coins forged by Roman Emperor Valens were unearthed at the astonishment of archaeologists; these findings represent the first of this kind in the Land of the Pyramids.

The two coins were found during excavations in the west part of St. Catherine's monastery in Sinai. The image represented on the front side of the coins is very similar to that of Valens' and specialists agreed that he is indeed.

Valens ruled the Eastern Roman Empire between 364 BC and 378 BC; his reign was nothing close to peaceful. He had to black-out the revolt by Procopius, and then fight the Sassanids, but the war with the Goths meant his end.

In 378 AD a battle was to be fought which will decisively change roman history. Near the town of Adrianople, now Edirne, Valens organized his forces in battle formations. He wanted a quick victory against the unprepared Goths. He had received word of a huge Gothic army walking the fields of his Empire, but when scouts returned they reported a far smaller number, thus giving the Romans numerical superiority. Valens couldn't wait, he wanted a victory, a quick success would give him eternal glory. Following his probably egoistic reason he ignored messages from the Western Emperor Gratian, who urged him not to attack but wait for his reinforcements. All in vain, he saw an opportunity and was keen to use it.

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echizento's Avatar
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 Posted 05/30/2008  08:56 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add echizento to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Nice, Thanks for the write up.
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 Posted 05/30/2008  09:51 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
...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
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 Posted 05/30/2008  9:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Spider5689 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
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.


I was thinking the exact same thing.
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Mairo's Avatar
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 Posted 05/31/2008  06:35 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mairo to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Very interesting article!
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