MUNICH, GERMANY—Live Science reports that a Celtic gold coin dated to the second or first century B.C. has been found close to the Lech River in southeastern Germany. The site is located near the site of an ancient road that traveled north across the Alps to Italy’s city of Trento, and may have been lost by a traveler. The rare curved coin, known as a “rainbow cup,” bears an image of a four-pointed star, perhaps a symbol of the four cardinal points, surrounded by arches, which may represent the horizon and the rising and setting of the moon. The opposite side of the coin bears a stylized human head with a large eye and nose and lips formed with dots. “The name rainbow cup coins come from the legend that they are drops of gold that fall to earth at the end of a rainbow,” said Bernward Ziegaus of Bavaria’s State Archaeological Collection. Roman coins became the main currency in the region after the conquest in 15 B.C., he explained. The rainbow cup will go on display at the state museum next year. To read about another discovery of rainbow cups in northeastern Germany, go to "Golden Lucky Charms."
Rare Celtic Gold Coin Discovered in Germany
News September 10, 2023
Recommended Articles
Features March/April 2023
The Shaman's Secrets
9,000 years ago, two people were buried in Germany with hundreds of ritual objects—who were they?
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2023
An Undersea Battlefield
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2022
Take a Seat
Artifacts September/October 2022
Nordic Bronze Age Figurine
-
Features July/August 2023
An Elegant Enigma
The luxurious possessions of a seventeenth-century woman continue to intrigue researchers a decade after they were retrieved from a shipwreck
(Courtesy Museum Kaapskil) -
Features July/August 2023
Rise of the Persian Princes
In their grand capital Persepolis, Achaemenid rulers expressed their vision of a prosperous, multicultural empire
(Borna_Mir/ Adobe Stock) -
Letter from Patagonia July/August 2023
Surviving a Windswept Land
For 13,000 years, hunter-gatherers thrived in some of the world’s harshest environments
(Courtesy Raven Garvey) -
Artifacts July/August 2023
Norse Gold Bracteate
(Arnold Mikkelsen, National Museum of Denmark)