“German WW2 soldier” is the term used by the Polish archaeologists who discovered the site. If they’re OK with it, the morality police can probably stand down.
The article says that the coins likely belonged to the solider because they coincide with areas of likely deployment.
The rest of the stuff was just in the area and there’s no suggestion the soldier even knew about it. They just stumbled on it by accident because they were investigating the soldier.
It is. And coins are small enough and common enough to be found/stolen/bought and easily carried off as loot.
Plenty of ancient coins were “re-distributed” to the west in the last 20 years from Afghanistan and Iraq. I knew a guy from work who had a small collection he bought while serving.
I also happened to be visiting a local coin shop and overheard an unintentionally funny conversation about loot.
Rando: I have a <lowers voice> ‘German flag’ that I’m interested in selling.
Clerk: Those are pretty common, so we probably can’t give you much.
Rando: It’s an OLD <lowers voice> ‘German flag’.
Clerk: Look, I’m guessing it’s the Nazi one? Those are super common because every soldier brought one back as a souvenir.
If it’s not already apparent, I like coins. And if I were a common soldier wrapped up in a war, I would absolutely pick up any interesting spare change I came across. Wouldn’t murder anyone for it, but if it looked abandoned? Absolutely.
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
Anyone else know the name for a "German WW2 soldier?’
Or how one might have “acquired” that collection?
“German WW2 soldier” is the term used by the Polish archaeologists who discovered the site. If they’re OK with it, the morality police can probably stand down.
The article says that the coins likely belonged to the solider because they coincide with areas of likely deployment. The rest of the stuff was just in the area and there’s no suggestion the soldier even knew about it. They just stumbled on it by accident because they were investigating the soldier.
Anyone who uses the term “German WW2 soldier” is a Nazi apologist.
The article is directly quoting the Polish archaeologists who discovered the cite.
The Nazis were a political party and the article does not mention him being a part of the S.S.
And to answer your second question - Nazi time travel.
Lol, Nazi simps never change. Bro’s about to try and tell us Rommel was a swell guy.
I do nazi what you mean?
Looting, a popular past time of all soldiers.
Bro’s both siding the fucking Nazis.
That’s how wars go isn’t it?
It is. And coins are small enough and common enough to be found/stolen/bought and easily carried off as loot.
Plenty of ancient coins were “re-distributed” to the west in the last 20 years from Afghanistan and Iraq. I knew a guy from work who had a small collection he bought while serving.
I also happened to be visiting a local coin shop and overheard an unintentionally funny conversation about loot.
Rando: I have a <lowers voice> ‘German flag’ that I’m interested in selling. Clerk: Those are pretty common, so we probably can’t give you much. Rando: It’s an OLD <lowers voice> ‘German flag’. Clerk: Look, I’m guessing it’s the Nazi one? Those are super common because every soldier brought one back as a souvenir.
If it’s not already apparent, I like coins. And if I were a common soldier wrapped up in a war, I would absolutely pick up any interesting spare change I came across. Wouldn’t murder anyone for it, but if it looked abandoned? Absolutely.
You’re why smart people avoid Beehaw.
Yay I got called a name and everything got solved, carry on soldier.
Uh huh.
What name did you get called?
Honestly, I do not doubt many things were pocketed while digging trenches. These do not look like looted items.Zzz, too sleepy.The tools were just near the grave, the coins are almost certainly war/genocide loot.
Ah yes, I see at the end of the article. Missed that. :)