A rare coin that was used to pay for bus rides in the 1950s in England has been found to be over 2000 years old after it was donated to the Leeds Museums and Galleries.
A 2,000-year-old Carthaginian coin minted in ancient Cádiz was unknowingly used to pay a bus fare in Leeds in the 1950s before being donated to Leeds Museums and Galleries.
An ancient Phoenician coin once used as a bus fare in England, is now identified as a 2,000-year-old artifact.
A coin once used to pay a bus fare in Leeds has been identified as a 2,000-year-old Carthaginian coin from Spain and is now part of the Leeds Museums collection.
A strategically important base is the setting for a new version of an old story about colonialism, exile, sovereignty, and the projection of power ...
Coin used to pay for bus ticket in Leeds found to be 2,000 years old - The coin was given to a local bus driver decades ago ...
WEAPON-wielding ultras who battled on the Ibrox pitch after Sunday’s powderkeg Scottish Cup clash injured cops and fans including a ten-year-old boy. Several cops — including a female officer — ...
Rangers and Celtic supporters clashed on the pitch after the Hoops’ Scottish Cup win at Ibrox with 7,500 away fans in attendance.
James Edwards, chief cashier for Leeds Transport Company in the 1950s, put aside any fake or foreign coins he found, passing them to his grandson Peter.
Made in the 1st century BC by descendants of the Carthaginians, the money features their god Melqart, ruler of the underworld ...
These cascading houseplants can turn ordinary ledges and hanging pots into eye-catching displays with texture, movement, and ...
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