It was a warm, sunny July morning.
I, as a person who was then studying at a university, was on vacation and decided to go on a bike to dig the foundation, which had already borne fruit. For the very first time, as many as 2 silver coins fell on it, 5 kopecks each, one of which was a Mason.
In general, having arrived at the place, I began digging around a house where I had not yet looked.
He dug in strips, simultaneously ringing the lower layers and the dump.
There was no special result this time…
After rubbing my fingers a little, I realized that it was shiny!
I put it aside until I got home, and then I put it in ammonia, which perfectly removed the oxides and this is how the coin began to look:
After these small finds, nothing else came out except village garbage.
It’s already almost 19 o’clock, it would be time to go home, but something finally pulled me to make a small hole next to the foundation… You probably know, it happens that a place attracts with something, maybe an inner instinct… I noticed it more than once, and there were always unexpected finds.
I dug out a small square, an area the size of a fiskar bayonet, because at that time I was with a Garrett sniper (a very cool thing – I regret that I sold it).
A sniper allows you to detect the presence of metal in small holes, which is what I did.
The device showed a stable signal, like a simple copper cross, that is, low, near the middle of the scale.
I, of course, thought that this was some kind of garbage again, like melting lead or something like that, because copper and silver sound mostly higher… But it is impossible not to reach the target with stable signals, no matter what the signal is (except for iron, of course).
I got it…
I took out a cross of 2 petals…
«Church or something?» – I thought and began to look in the hole for the remaining petals, which also rang on the device and was removed, the cross was now assembled and without loss.
It was easy to travel; the finds and the desire to find out what I found added strength. Upon arriving home, the first thing I did was change clothes and go wash the cross.
The text was barely legible due to the oxides, but was readable.
Left: For.
Right: Veru
Below: and the Tsar… «So, it’s just a St. George’s Cross, only there are more inscriptions and different ones!»- I thought… I went online, but didn’t immediately find the same cross, only others, with the same inscriptions…
I went to the forum, posted a photo, asked …
People began to congratulate me on a very, very rare find…
In general, it turned out to be the Militia Cross of Alexander 1, issued to the people’s militia in 1812!
It is found very rarely in collections, apparently due to its fragility – the rays constantly broke off…
In my case, 2 broke off, but they were lying next to each other. Subsequently, the more I looked for information about the find, the more surprised I was. Needless to say, I didn’t find any passages at auctions or cross sales..? I created a memo with short excerpts from various sources:
Then, according to technology, I don’t remember where I read it, dipped it in alcohol and dried it:
Everything was found, as you probably noticed, with the Garrett ACE 250. So it’s not the device that plays the key role, but something else…
This find remains one of the most valuable for me to this day, and awaits a beautiful design…
Sent by Gleb R.
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