A trove of coins discovered in house in France have gone on sale in Paris this week, and are said to be worth up to €2 million.
The coins, which run from ancient Greece and Byzantium through Gaul and the Middle Ages to the 19th century, were collected over a lifetime by Paul Narce, a resident of Castillonnès, a small hilltop market town.
When Narce, a reclusive man with a handicap, died aged 89 last August, the notary in charge of his estate heard from villagers that he had spent all his spare money collecting coins with his sister Claudette, who lived with him.
Narce had no children or direct heirs and had been in a care home after his sister had died a year earlier.
The coins, which run from ancient Greece and Byzantium through Gaul and the Middle Ages to the 19th century, were collected over a lifetime by Paul Narce, a resident of Castillonnès, a small hilltop market town.
When Narce, a reclusive man with a handicap, died aged 89 last August, the notary in charge of his estate heard from villagers that he had spent all his spare money collecting coins with his sister Claudette, who lived with him.
Narce had no children or direct heirs and had been in a care home after his sister had died a year earlier.