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The Ark of the Covenant, Nazis and Pirates: The Mysteries of the World's Greatest Lost Treasures - and Where They May Be - Walla! Tourism

2021-03-19T17:58:41.048Z


Pirates, Nazis and the Ark of the Covenant: The Mysteries of the Greatest Lost Treasures in the World And what is the chance that someone will be able to find them and become the richest man in the world?


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The Ark of the Covenant, Nazis and Pirates: The Mysteries of the World's Greatest Lost Treasures - and Where They May Be

From the Buried Treasure of the Blackbeard to the Lost Ark of the Covenant - these are the mysteries of the greatest lost treasures in the world and what is the chance that someone will be able to find them and become the richest man in human history

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Friday, 19 March 2021, 00:40 Updated: 01:29

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Treasure hunters in Poland are looking for a train laden with gold, hidden by the Nazis - August 2016 (Photo: Reuters, edited by Ohad Peter)

Lost Treasure Tales aren't just taken from fantasy and adventure books and movies like "The Gonies" or "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade."

Some of the best stories are based on reality and it is possible that some of those lost treasures are still hidden from them and waiting for one of you to find them and become the richest person in the world.



Throughout history, especially in times of wars and disasters, great treasures have disappeared and only urban legends attest to their whereabouts.

Daily Star reporter Natasha Weinerczk summed up some of the most famous lost treasure stories - including where they might be today in case you're in the area and want to take a look.

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Montezuma's Treasure

In 1519 the Spanish conqueror (Conquistador) Hernan Cortes arrived in the Aztec Empire and was received by Emperor Montezuma II, who offered him precious gold and silver so that he could leave them quietly.

The gifts achieved the opposite effect.

Cortes has revealed that the locals think he is the legendary god Katzelcoatl, who the prophecy said would one day return to claim his city.

The Spaniards did not comply with the Aztec demands and began raids on the city.

The Aztec emperor decided to open the gates to Cortes, hold a solemn ceremony in his honor and hand over power to him, but Cortes banned Montezuma and looted the treasures of the kingdom.



The locals rebelled against their king, executed him and Cortes was forced to flee to Honduras.

According to local legend, while fleeing he dumped the many treasures he had collected there (which included gold, silver and precious stones) in the waters of Lake Tschakoco in Mexico.

Since then, it is said that the gold lay on the bottom of the lake - and many have tried to find it since without success.

Another version claims that 2,000 men pulled out the gold and silver and moved it north, perhaps as far as southern Utah, USA.

The Treasure of the "Blackbeard"

Edward Teach, known as the "Blackbeard", was one of the most notorious pirates in history.

It sailed across the West Indies in the early 18th century and subdued more than 40 ships, including ships that sailed back to Spain and were laden with gold, silver and precious jewelry.

In 1718 the blackbeard was killed by a British naval force, in his last battle in which he was defeated and shot to death.

His head hung on the mast of the guard ship that subdued him to show the world what was happening to pirates, but according to urban legend the formidable pirate hid large parts of the treasures he had robbed and did not tell anyone about the location.



According to a diary he kept, the value of the black-bearded pirate was $ 12.5 million.

If you think this is a relatively low amount for a pirate at his level - you are right.

The pirate Thomas Tau, also known as the Robber Island Islander, was the only pirate known to have actually used a treasure chest to save his money and loot, which in today's terms is estimated at $ 102 million.

The black-bearded man was a much more successful robber than he was and therefore it makes sense that he accumulated a much larger sum, however in his diary he also wrote that his true treasure "lies in a place known only to me and the devil."



Treasure hunters are unsuccessfully searching to this day for lost valuables - valued at a total of $ 500 million - following clues that led them to various destinations such as the Caribbean, Cayman Islands and North Carolina.

The Nazi Treasury

During the 1930s and 1940s, the German Nazi regime looted precious treasures from Jewish families and museums throughout Europe.

There was even a rumor that a Nazi train was transporting 300 tons of gold and jewelery to Austria through a network of secret tunnels.



Towards the end of World War II, large quantities of counterfeit banknotes, which were produced by prisoners as part of Operation Bernhard, were sunk in Lake Topolis in Austria.

It is estimated that in addition to this the Nazis drowned in the lake also art treasures looted during World War II, as well as gold worth billions of dollars and numerous documents, including a list of hiding places for further looting, a list of bank accounts and more.

The only thing discovered on the lake so far were containers filled with counterfeit millions of pounds from Allied countries, found in 1959. It was part of the Nazis' plan to destroy enemy economies by raising inflation and uncontrollable prices. A



momentary success was recorded in 2015, when reported. Inside a tunnel in the mountains was the "Nazi Golden Train" which has been considered an urban legend for decades since its apparent disappearance at the end of World War II.It is said to have been a German armored train buried in Lower Silesia near the city and Bezeq in January 1945 towards the end of World War II. To Poland.The train contained gold, artwork, weapons and other valuables.According to local legend, the train left Morzlav laden with gold and other treasures.Enter the tunnel under the Owl Mountains was buried there with a capacity of 300 tons of gold, jewelry, weapons, and artwork .



many have tried to find her to get to the treasure might be hidden there without success, until 2015, then turned to two people, a Pole and a German, through counsel to the Polish authorities claiming they had found the train and they require 10% purchased for detecting the exact location. after a short time the deputy Minister of Culture Paul

Ni said a ground penetrating radar test confirmed with a 99 percent probability that a 100-foot-long train was found inside a tunnel in the mountains: “This is an unprecedented situation.

There is a more than 99% probability that this train is real. "However, after an examination of more than a year, it was determined that it was a hoax and the location of the treasure or the train is still unknown.

More on Walla!

Tons of Gold and Jewelry: The Secret Diary That May Reveal the Lost Treasure of the Nazis

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Florentine diamond

The Florentine diamond, believed to be the largest yellow diamond in the world boasting 137 carats, was owned by the Italian Medici family and later came to the Austrian Habsburg royal family.

He came from India, but it is not known who incited him.

Legends about him began around 1450 AD, but his first official record was in 1656 - and his value was then estimated at 750,000 dollars (about 20 million dollars in today's terms).



After World War I, the family deposited the precious diamond in a safe at a Swiss bank, for which attorney Bruno Steiner was in charge.

A few years later he disappeared and in 1924 Steiner was charged with fraud, but later acquitted.

The whereabouts of the Florentine diamond are unknown to this day, but some estimates are that it was taken to South America with some of Habsburg's other royal jewelery, from where it was brought to the US, cut and sold.

Ark of the Covenant

The Ark of the Covenant, the ark in which according to Jewish tradition and the Bible the tablets of the covenant were kept, was covered with gold and adorned with a golden garland. It was kept in the First Temple, but after the destruction of the First Temple by the Babylonian army in 587 BC, the ark was probably exiled to Babylon. Does not appear in Nebuchadnezzar's loot records, or in that of the vessels that Cyrus king of Persia returned to the building of the Second Temple - and it is doubtful that this object, the most sacred and precious in the treasures of the Temple (and Judaism), was taken without mentioning the Bible.



The location of the Ark of the Covenant has long been a source of speculation - some claim that it is housed in the Church of Our Lady Miriam Mitzion in Axum, Ethiopia, but others claim that it was completely destroyed and will never be found.

There is even one theory that he was brought to Earth by ancient aliens who took him back with them.



The Ark also called the Ark of God or the Ark of the Testimony was located within the Holy of Holies in the First Temple.

The ark, which has not been seen since the destruction of the first temple, was perhaps the most important of the temple vessels and was defined as the main "seat of the Divine."

There are two opinions in Chazal regarding the location of the Ark of the Covenant after the destruction of the First Temple. Rabbi Eliezer and Rabbi Shimon believe that the Ark was discovered in Babylon where it was corrupted, whereas Rabbi Yehuda claims that the Ark was stored in its place in the Temple - but removed from there and exiled elsewhere. The days, the coming of the Messiah depends on the return of the ark or ark to Jerusalem.

More on Walla!

After thousands of years: Is the Ark of the Covenant in one of these places?

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Lima Treasure

In 1820, as the forces of the Argentine general Jose de San Martin advanced towards Lima in Peru, the Spanish authorities tried to save their great wealth, which had been collected since they had conquered the Inca Empire in the 16th century.

They entrusted to British Navy Captain William Thompson the task of hiding the treasure on board his ship, but Thompson killed the Spaniards who had brought him the treasure and fled with the loot.



His ship set off with a wonderfully precious treasure in its belly - it is estimated that the massive treasure is worth almost $ 200 million (or $ 1 billion according to other estimates) and included a life-size gold gemstone image of the Virgin Mary, two of her statues with baby Jesus , Silver and gold coins, gold bars, jewelry, diamonds, gems and valuable tools.



According to the narrator, the ship reached the island of Cocos in Costa Rica, where Thompson and his men had hoped to hide for some time.

They buried the treasure and waited, but were discovered by the Spaniards who were after them and all the crew were executed by hanging.

Only Captain Thompson and his deputy were left alive so they could lead the Spaniards to the buried treasure.

The two led them around the island but managed to escape from the Spanish captors and disappeared into the thick of the jungle.



This was the last time Thompson was seen - and the treasure has not been found since.

It is estimated that Thompson was able to reach the island of Newfoundland with the help of a boat of whalers.

His deputy, James Alexander Forbes, managed to escape as far as California and become a successful businessman there, never returning to the island.



More than 300 expeditions have since tried their luck and have not been able to find it anywhere on the island.

Prominent among them was a German named Augustus Gissler, who lived on the island between 1889 and 1908 which he devoted to excavations and treasure hunts, but was able to find only 6 gold coins.

The Jewish gangster Bagsy Siegel also led a group of Hollywood stars in 1938 on a quest to find the treasure, but without success.



One theory is that the treasure was not buried on Coconut Island at all, but on an unnamed island somewhere in Central America.

The Costa Rican government does not currently allow travel to search for treasure on the island and an official statement issued stated that it is not on the island.

More on Walla!

Treasure hunters use the Dead Sea Scrolls to find an ancient Jewish treasure worth a billion dollars - which may have been stolen

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These are the ten most valuable artifacts lost in history:

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