Middle schooler finds coin from Troy in Berlin
by speckx on 4/17/2026, 2:41:49 PM
https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/75848
Comments
by: hecturchi
As a child I was walking down the street and kicked something by chance that sounded metallic. 150 year old coin, irrc. Just there on the asphalt next to the sidewalk.<p>Unfortunately bronze, with trimmed edges, common mint and worth very little. But if you tell me someone just stumbles onto and old coin in the street just lime that, I pretty much believe it.
4/17/2026, 4:34:13 PM
by: lordleft
I knew vaguely that Troy had many layers of settlement, but I didn't realize that Troy had an extensive life in antiquity that extended into the classical Greek age (Post-Bronze Age) and Early Roman Age. It's funny to think of Roman and Greek Tourists visiting Troy VIII in 300 BC.
4/17/2026, 3:18:29 PM
by: cachius
Official German press statment: <a href="https://www.berlin.de/landesdenkmalamt/aktivitaeten/presse/2026/pressemitteilung.1657799.php" rel="nofollow">https://www.berlin.de/landesdenkmalamt/aktivitaeten/presse/2...</a>
4/17/2026, 4:40:18 PM
by: brcmthrowaway
Germany was populated in antiquity?
4/17/2026, 5:09:18 PM
by: rtkrni
No information about the kid who found it? Did he get some reward for finding it? Does it come from some archeological site around there or some collector just lost it there?
4/17/2026, 3:57:31 PM
by: danans
> Already in the 5th century BC, Herodotus reports about the ‘Hyperboreans’ (Folks from above the North Wind), and how they regularly visited the island of Delos<p>Heh, some things never change.
4/17/2026, 4:33:08 PM
by: cammasmith
Can't even imagine what it's like to live in Europe. Just casually going on a walk and finding a coin that is over 2 millennia old. Just another Tuesday.
4/17/2026, 4:20:17 PM