Coin Hoard Unearthed Near Corinth’s Harbor

News April 2, 2018

(Michael Ierardi)
SHARE:
Greece Corinth coins
(Michael Ierardi)

BRIDGEWATER, MASSACHUSETTS—Live Science reports that more than 100 coins and an iron lock were found in a collapsed building near Corinth’s ancient harbor. Paul Scotton of California State University Long Beach and the Lechaion Harbor and Settlement Land Project said the coins were found just about one foot below modern ground level, under the building’s tile roof. Many of the coins were made of bronze, and the earliest dates to the mid-fourth century A.D., according to Michael Ierardi of Bridgewater State University in Massachusetts. The most recent coins date to the late fifth century, during the reign of Anastasius I, who later reformed the coinage system of the Byzantine Empire. The building was found near a yard containing iron slag, unworked iron, cooked animal bones, and a concrete basin. To read about the disassembly of a giant coin hoard found in the Channel Islands, go to “Ka-Ching!

  • Features March/April 2018

    The Viking Great Army

    A tale of conflict and adaptation played out in northern England

    Read Article
    (Bymuseum, Oslo, Norway/Index/Bridgeman Images)
  • Letter From Hungary March/April 2018

    The Search for the Sultan’s Tomb

    How archaeologists trying to locate the final resting place of Suleiman the Magnificent uncovered the remains of a crucial outpost of the Ottoman Empire

    Read Article
    (Courtesy András Szamosi)
  • Artifacts March/April 2018

    Sgraffito Slip-Decorated Plate

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Joe Bagley/Boston Landmarks Commission)
  • Digs & Discoveries March/April 2018

    The Mesopotamian Merchant Files

    Read Article
    (Mike P. Shepherd/Alamy Stock Photo)