
According to experts, a large collection of coin collections, most of which have been buried for more than 50 years, is expected to exceed $100 million at auction.
The traveler collection, considered the most expensive coin collection ever auctioned, will be available for sale over the next three years – the first sale will take place on May 20.
This is the origin story of this valuable set of coins that make them so great.
It has coins from over 100 territories around the world, ranging from ancient times to modern times. However, the series will be auctioned by Numismatica Ars Classica, and the more remarkable fact is that most coins are buried in the underground half a century.

According to the press release, the original collector (not yet identified) started buying gold coins for the first time after the 1929 Wall Street crash. He quickly developed the “taste of coins with great historical interest, beauty and rarity” and ended up owning about 15,000 coins.
The man and his wife made extensive trips in the Americas and Europe in the 1930s, picking up rare and historic coins when they went – and also bringing together detailed archives of their purchases.
Although Hitler’s Nazi Party threw dark shadows across the continent, the two eventually settled in Europe. However, collectors will certainly feel an imminent threat, but carefully pack the coins into the cigar box, then transfer them into the aluminum box and buried underground – where they lasted fifty years.
“The series spans all geographical areas and contains unusually rare coins in saved states that have never been seen in modern times. Several types of coins have never been offered in public auctions, emphasizing their fairly rareness,” the release said.
When they were eventually retrieved by the collector’s heirs, the coins were stored in a bank safe and later sold to the auction house for sale along with the family of the coin owner who asked for privacy.
The detailed records of collectors make it easier for the auction house team to study the source and value of coins, some of which date back to auctions of some of the greatest collections in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The highlight of the news release said the 100 Duca gold coins from Ferdinand III in Habsburg, which was minted in 1629 when he was the Grand Duke of Austria, Hungary, Croatia and Bohemia.
It consists of 348.5 grams of fine gold and is one of the largest denominations of European gold coins ever minted.
George III’s George III dated 1777 and is worth approximately US$340,000 (300,000,000 Swiss francs).
George III’s George III dated 1777 and is worth approximately US$340,000 (300,000,000 Swiss francs). Courteous Flint Culture
There was also a set of five “extremely rare” Tomans, cast by Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar in the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Tehran and Isfahan. Only five complete sets are known, one of which is at the Ashmoreya Museum in Oxford, England.
“The wide range and outstanding quality of the coins offered, the massive rare quantity and the fascinating story of the series’ formations will make these sales a landmark in the history of monetary science,” said Arturo Russo, director of Numismatica Ars Classica, in a press release.