Scientists stumped by find at Okinawa castle of Roman, Ottoman coins dating centuries apart
BY MARI YAMAGUCHI
AP
ARTICLE HISTORY
When he was shown the 10 tiny, tarnished discs that had sat unnoticed in storage for 2½ years at a dig on Okinawa, the archaeologist eyes lit up.
He had been to archaeological sites in Italy and Egypt, and recognized the “little round things” as old coins, including a few likely dating to the Roman Empire.
“I was so excited I almost forgot what I was there for, and the coins were all we talked about,” said Toshio Tsukamoto of the Gangoji Institute for Research of Cultural Property in Nara.
The discovery, announced last month, is baffling. How did the coins, some dating to the third or fourth century, wind up half a world away in a medieval castle in Okinawa, an island that was not part of Japan at the time?
Experts suspect they may have arrived centuries later via China or Southeast Asia, not as currency but as decorations or treasures.
The 10 copper coins were unearthed in December 2013 at the 12th to 15th century Katsuren Castle, a UNESCO World Heritage site, during an annual excavation for study and tourism promotion by the board of education in Uruma, a city on central Okinawa Island.
While the find has yet to be submitted for publication in an academic journal, an outside expert is convinced the coins are real.
“There is almost no mistake” about their authenticity, said Makiko Tsumura, a curator at the Ancient Orient Museum in Tokyo, though she allowed that they could also be counterfeit versions from about the same time.
Four of the coins are from the third- to fourth-century Roman Empire, and a fifth one is from the 17th-century Ottoman Empire. The remaining five are still being examined.
The coins, which are on display at the Uruma City Yonagusuku Historical Museum through Nov. 25, were dug up from about 1 meter underground in a layer believed to be from the 14th to 15th century.
“At first, we didn’t think they were coins. Those little round things, to us, seemed like armor parts,” said Masaki Yokoo, a city official in charge of the archaeological project.
Details that were barely distinguishable to the eye emerged more clearly in X-ray analysis. One bears an image of fourth-century Roman Emperor Constantine I, and another shows a helmeted soldier holding a shield in one hand, while stabbing an enemy with a spear in the other.
The Ottoman coin is inscribed with the year equivalent to 1687, Yokoo said.
Tsumura said the X-ray analysis, photos, size and weight match typical Roman and Ottoman coins, resembling those excavated in China, Indonesia or India — places that had trade with Okinawa.
Tsukamoto said the coins might have been intentionally planted as a pacifying ritual at the castle, which was abandoned in 1458, similar to armor, jewelry and other valuables buried in funeral rituals in Okinawa.
Further investigation, including analysis of the copper content and other artifacts found with the ancient currency may help to identify the coins’ origins.
Researchers are also seeking an explanation for why coins from two distinct eras were found near each other, and how a 17th-century coin could have been in a layer believed to be 200 to 300 years older than that.
“There are still lots of unknowns,” said Okinawa International University archaeologist Hiroki Miyagi. “Our findings this time are just the beginning.”
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