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The Celtic coins were discovered in 1999 and date back to the third century BC.
The Celtic coins were discovered in 1999 and date back to the third century BC. Photograph: Mößbauer/Wikimedia
The Celtic coins were discovered in 1999 and date back to the third century BC. Photograph: Mößbauer/Wikimedia

Celtic gold coins worth ‘several million euros’ stolen from German museum

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Third-century coins taken in heist involving ‘cut off’ phone and internet connections in Manching, Bavaria

Thieves have stolen a hoard of Celtic coins worth several million euros from a German museum after apparently disrupting local telephone and internet connections.

Employees at the museum in Manching discovered on Tuesday that a “showcase was broken” and the collection of 450 coins had been stolen, local police told AFP.

Investigators did not provide any other details as to the circumstances surrounding the heist, but local officials highlighted a disruption to phone and internet services.

“They cut off the whole of Manching,” the mayor, Herbert Nerb, told the Sueddeutsche Zeitung. “The museum is actually a high-security location. But all the connections to the police were severed.”

“Professionals were at work here,” Nerb added. The disappearance of the treasure was a “complete catastrophe” for the Bavarian town, he said.

The collection of gold coins has been a highlight of the Celtic and Roman museum in Manching. Discovered in 1999, the coins date back to the third century BC and have a value of “several million euros”, according to police

“The loss of the Celtic treasure is a disaster,” Bavaria’s minister of science and arts, Markus Blume, told German news agency dpa. “As a testament to our history, the gold coins are irreplaceable.”

The coin theft is the latest in a series of high-profile museum heists in Germany.

In another numismatic robbery, the “big maple leaf”, considered the world’s second-largest gold coin, was snatched from Berlin’s prestigious Bode museum in 2017.

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Thieves also took 21 pieces of jewellery and other valuables in a brazen night-time raid on the Green Vault museum in Dresden’s Royal Palace in November 2019.

Authorities believe members of a notorious criminal family carried out that robbery. There remains no trace of the jewels, which include a sword with a diamond-encrusted hilt and a shoulder piece which contains a 49-carat white diamond.

Insurance experts said the Green Vault loot was worth €113.8m (£98.6m), with German media calling it the biggest art heist in modern history.

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