Huge hoard of Roman coins discovered in Italian theater basement


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Hundreds of Roman gold coins have been unearthed in the basement of an Italian theater.

The corners were found in a stone container during excavations at the site of a theater in Como, northern Italy, according to the country's Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities (MiBAC).

Imperial era, which goes back to the 5th century.

"We do not yet know in detail the historical and cultural significance of [the] finding, "said Italian Culture Minister Alberto Bonisoli, in a Facebook post, noting that the area is full of archaeological treasures. The discovery, he added, "fills me with pride."

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The coins date back to the late Roman Empire (MiBAC)

The corners were found at the 19th-century Teatro Cressoni, which closed in 1997, Euronews reported.

The trove of coins is the latest fascinating Roman-era find in Italy. Not long ago, pictures of a man's skeleton, apparently broken by a rock during the ancient eruption of Mount Vesuvius, went viral after their discovery.

The excavation at the ancient Roman city of Pompeii, near modern Naples, unearthed the remains of the man who was thought to have been wrecked by the eruption in 79 A.D.

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The corners were found in a Roman-era stone container (MiBAC)

Archaeologists also recently unearthed the final resting place of an ancient racehorse among the ruins of Pompeii.

Last year, construction of Rome's new subway unearthed the ruins of an early 3rd-century building and the 1,800-year-old skeleton of a crouching dog that appears to be in the same blaze that collapsed the structure.

In the U.K. a mysterious Roman bronze hand was recently discovered by archaeologists near Hadrian's Wall in the North of England.

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The gold coins were found in the base of a theater in Como (MiBAC)

Earlier this year, archaeologists also unearthed ancient boxing gloves at the site of Vindolanda, an ancient Roman fort just south of Hadrian's Wall.

An exquisite Roman-era mosaic was recently uncovered by archaeologists in Israel. Experts discovered the stunning 1,700-year-old artifact in the city of Lod, central Israel.

The Associated Press contributed to this article.

Follow James Rogers on Twitter @jamesjrogers

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