See the Rare Gold Coin with Roman Emperor Nero's Face Discovered in Jerusalem Dating Back Thousands of Years

Posted by Thandiubani on Tue 21st Feb, 2017 - tori.ng

A rare coin with the face of Roman Emperor Nero has been discovered in Jerusalem dating back thousands of years.

Rare gold coin, minted in A.D. 56 or A.D. 57, discovered at Mount Zion in Jerusalem. Credit: Image courtesy UNC Charlotte
 
According to LiveScience, archaeologists have discovered an "exceptional" gold coin emblazoned with the Roman Emperor Nero's face at a site in Jerusalem.
 
The coin dates to around A.D. 60, shortly before the Romans destroyed Jerusalem in A.D. 70, sacking the city and tearing down the Second Temple, an important holy site for Judaism. It was discovered during excavations of Mount Zion and probably came from a Jewish home, according to archaeologists.
 
"The coin is exceptional," archaeologist Shimon Gibson said in a statement, "because this is the first time that a coin of this kind has turned up in Jerusalem in a scientific dig. Coins of this type are usually only found in private collections, where we don't have clear evidence as to place of origin."
 
The coin turned up in the ruins of wealthy villas from the first century A.D.

"These belonged to the priestly and aristocratic quarter located in the Upper City of Jerusalem," Gibson, an adjunct professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, said of the homes. "Finds include the well-preserved rooms of a very large mansion, a Jewish ritual pool (mikveh) and a bathroom, both with their ceilings intact."
 
The mansion, discovered in 2013, contained a stash of Murex sea snail shells. These snails were the source of an expensive purple dye used during the first century A.D., and the discovery suggested that the Jewish priestly class may have been involved in regulating the dye-making industry, Gibson speculated at the time. 
 
This wealthy neighborhood would have been destroyed along with the rest of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. The coin may have been hidden and missed by Roman soldiers during the siege, Gibson said.

"It's a valuable piece of personal property and wouldn't have been cast away like rubbish or casually dropped. It's conceivable that it ended up outside these structures in the chaos that happened as this area was destroyed," he said.
 
The coin shows the Emperor Nero, who ruled from A.D. 54 to 68, in profile, surrounded by the inscription "NERO CAESAR AVG IMP." The back of the coin shows an oak wreath and the inscriptions "EX S C" and "PONTIF MAX TR P III." These inscriptions date the coin's creation to either A.D. 56 or A.D. 57.
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