-Ki-
Hero Member
- Feb 12, 2009
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- 574
- Detector(s) used
- MD & Handwand "CaveHunter"Hiker" SonyDigital SLR
Found this story and thought id share, and its a great find i plan to follow up on....It reads
On a Sunday morning in 1952, a man named Cox of Clay City, Kentucky was on his way to church. As he walked across a freshly plowed field, near his home. The sun just happened to reflect on something shiny sticking hailfway from a clod of dirt. Cox picked up the object, then started to throw it away when at first glance the metal appeared to be only an old metal button, but instead he dropped it into his pocket.
After church he took it home washed it off and discovered it was a coin covered with odd inscriptions. It would have been about 14 inches under ground before it was plowed up.
Cox, a great biblical reader, recalled having seen some pictures of old hebrew coins in a biblical dictionary he owned. from those pictures he was able to establish definitely that the coin was struck in either the first or sencond Jewish revolt against the Romans, over 1850 years ago.
On the other side of the coin is a temple building with a six pointed star over the center. The coin is made of copper and between the size of an american half dollar and a quarter. The letters at the left of the temple are an abreviation for the name Shimeon (simon) the real name of the Jewish leaderof the last revolt in 133 A.D. On the opposite side is a semi circle of letters with what appears to be a shock of wheat in the center, and characters that read "year 2 of the freedom of isreal".
The age of the coin was positivly established by Dr. Ralph Marcus of the university of chicago a man reconized as the leading scholar on Hellenistic culture. He determined that the coin was struck by Simon Bar Kokba, the leader of the second revolt against the Romans in 133 A.D. This would be a good spot to check over with a metal detector, more coins are almost certainly there.........
On a Sunday morning in 1952, a man named Cox of Clay City, Kentucky was on his way to church. As he walked across a freshly plowed field, near his home. The sun just happened to reflect on something shiny sticking hailfway from a clod of dirt. Cox picked up the object, then started to throw it away when at first glance the metal appeared to be only an old metal button, but instead he dropped it into his pocket.
After church he took it home washed it off and discovered it was a coin covered with odd inscriptions. It would have been about 14 inches under ground before it was plowed up.
Cox, a great biblical reader, recalled having seen some pictures of old hebrew coins in a biblical dictionary he owned. from those pictures he was able to establish definitely that the coin was struck in either the first or sencond Jewish revolt against the Romans, over 1850 years ago.
On the other side of the coin is a temple building with a six pointed star over the center. The coin is made of copper and between the size of an american half dollar and a quarter. The letters at the left of the temple are an abreviation for the name Shimeon (simon) the real name of the Jewish leaderof the last revolt in 133 A.D. On the opposite side is a semi circle of letters with what appears to be a shock of wheat in the center, and characters that read "year 2 of the freedom of isreal".
The age of the coin was positivly established by Dr. Ralph Marcus of the university of chicago a man reconized as the leading scholar on Hellenistic culture. He determined that the coin was struck by Simon Bar Kokba, the leader of the second revolt against the Romans in 133 A.D. This would be a good spot to check over with a metal detector, more coins are almost certainly there.........