What history does /his/ keep at home?
I have a couple of pic related (belt buckles for women's traditional costume) and several old coins. That's pretty much it.
>>1833189
Livestock
>>1833209
period/region?
>>1833231
wtf... are you slav?
>>1833236
>those rugs
Looks like he is from one of those Central Asian "stans".
If it was a goat he would have most certainly been Arab.
>>1833234
19th century Bulgaria
>>1833231
imagine the smell
>>1833252
when are you going to eat them?
>>1833231
what the fuck
>>1833259
Are you confusing me with the guy with the chicken?
Ancient Roman coin found by my friend on Cyprus
>>1833297
And I dug this up in Athens
>>1833279
kek, yes I was.
Nice piece though
>>1833231
Cute but like what the hell, man?
>>1833308
uh, patron, pretty sure that's illegal
>>1833189
>19th century master cast bronze portrait of General Bonaparte
>17th century Solingen rapier blade
>19th century Dutch police Klewang
>strange older walloon type blade in early 19th century (British?) naval fittings
>M1896/02 Swiss heavy cavalry saber
>20th century German Schläger blade for academic fencing
>4th century BC Greek Persephone terracotta figurine fragment
>>1833396
They just leave this crap out here in greece. They don't care about the stuff they can't put in the museums.
>>1833402
pics. nao
>>1833248
>If it was a goat he would have most certainly been Arab.
>implying that it isn't turks who keep livestock in your beds
>>1833435
But we don't lay with arab women, habibi.
>>1833411
did you at least report it to authorities?
>>1833412
>>1833463
>>1833444
okay that was actually great, I'm not even offended -- it's true.
>>1833468
>>1833454
Nahhh man they would just take it and put it in storage. If you have artifacts that were dug up before a certain year you can keep them without turning them over. So if I ever get caught, I claim it's my grandfather's.
>>1833481
you fucking piece of shit.
you literal human trash.
to you it's just a fragment of some maybe-old vase, but to archeologists the location, depth, age and structure/quality of that vase can tell an entire story that may solve a clue in the puzzle of history you abhorrent shitstain kill yourself goddamn I am mad
>>1833493
Nice troll, literally the only thing not directly observable worth knowing about that thing is its age through carbon dating and even that won't solve any grand puzzles of history.
>>1833504
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>>1833510
where is the proof of this potential you promise?
>>1833513
oh please, this is business as usual here
>>1833517
Swiss cavalry sabers where produced up to the 1940's and stored in swiss vaults cared for by swiss goblins. If you are into mint or near mint military sabers for cheap, check swiss on-line auctions, the build quality is amazing.
>>1833493
>>1833510
>>1833513
Not even from a grave.
Listen here Faggot do you know what this is? Is the bottom of a vase. It's not even an important one because there's nothing on it. This piece was made in Athens around 500-450 BC and let me tell you it's worthless. No pictures and it's pretty obvious its a discarded piece. Here is a picture of some ostraka made by probably the same workshop, they have thousands of them and one piece doesn't matter. My piece has no historical value other than a piece of Pottery. Plus here in greece they just leave this shit out if they don't have a use for it. Go to this park by Thissio and you can literally just walk around picking up pieces of Pottery because it's useless
Mostly coins and militaria.
Here's some of my favorites:
Top Row: denarius of Vespasian (69-79 AD), denarius of Severus Alexander (222-235), denarius of Septimius Severus (193-211), Sestercius or As (says early ancient Roman, though I'm pretty sure it's Diocletian), another Roman coin I can't identify
Bottom Row: Prussian double Thaler (Wilhelm I, 1861), Prussian Half-Thaler (Frederick the Great, 1767), Kingdom of Prussia bicentennial commemorative 2 Mark (1901), Dutch East India Company (1734)
>>1833535
Now here's a big piece of something I took from an ancient site in Cyprus, this is a little douchey but still
>>1833555
Forgot the pic
Also,
>2016
>Not using 6th century BC Greek dolphin coins
>>1833556
>>1833535
Here's some stuff that was uncovered from the rain and left outside
This is a lithograph from 1821? or 1823? I'm too lazy to look up when this edition of the Egyptian Expedition was published by napoleons cohorts.
While not the first Egyptology expedition of its kind they came back with the tabula rasa (before the british stole it) and had some of the most interesting encounters with the middle easterns to date of any anglo country.
Seeing a bunch of french men walking around in their depictions is great.
A full set of these plates in the original condition costs up to $1million.
Page from an early 16th century printed bible, a few roman coins, medieval ring and seal. Wemt mudlarking on the Thames and found a few bits of Tudor pottery and a fuckton of bones.
>>1833571
>tabula rasa
uh... you mean rosetta?
>>1833579
woops i guess it wasn't entirely blank.
This isn't entirely as rare but it has a neat story behind it.
My grandpa was a preacher in the 30s-70s and went out on the road all over the country. An art dealer he won over to Christ in Louisiana gave this to him and my grandma passed it onto me since no one else in the family cares about it.
Its a beautiful period piece from about 200 years ago, there's a date on it, also too lazy to look at it right now.
This has probably passed through over 10 hands since it was made.
>>1833513
scream all you want, there are no mods on /his/