Thieves Broke Into a German Museum and Made Off With a Cache of Gold Coins
[artnet] Thieves broke into a German museum on Monday night and stole 450 gold coins thought to be worth several million euros, the Bavarian State Criminal Police Office (LKA) confirmed.
The police have not disclosed whether they have arrested anyone for the crime, but it has been suggested that the criminals were professionals who got away with the heist by disrupting local phone and internet services.
The ancient treasures are around 2,000 years old and were uncovered in 1999 during the excavation of a large Celtic settlement in the modern-day region of Manching in Bavaria, Germany. It was the largest discovery of Celtic gold in the last century and a landmark find at one of the most important archaeological sites in central Europe.
In 2006, the treasure was installed at the nearby Roman-Celtic Museum, which presents local finds from the Iron Age and Roman times. It became the crown jewel of the collection.
"The loss of the Celtic treasure is a catastrophe, the gold coins are irreplaceable as evidence of our history," said Bavaria’s minister for science and art, Markus Blume, according to a report in Monopol. "Whoever did this, someone has violated our history."
"The burglary must have taken place in the early hours of the morning," said a spokesperson for the LKA. "It was classic, as you would imagine in a bad film."
It is believed the thieves succeeded in part by disrupting local phone and internet services. "Professionals were at work here," the local mayor, Herbet Nerb, told the Sueddeutsche Zeitung. "They cut off the whole of Manching. The museum is actually a high-security location but all the connections to the police were severed."
Posted by: Besoeker 2022-11-25 |