and finally… fake it till you make it
An ancient gold coin wrongly classified as a fake by specialists has proven the existence of a third century Roman emperor who was written out of history as a fictional character.
Specialists at the Brukenthal museum kept the coin locked away in a cupboard believing it to be a fake, however, their minds were changed by new research led by Prof Paul Pearson at University College London.
The coin bears the name “Sponsian”, that of the forgotten emperor, along with his portrait. The coin was found some 300 years ago in modern-day Transylvania, where there was once a Roman outpost.
Microsopic scratch marks helped prove the legitimacy of the artefact, showing that it was in circulation 2,000 years ago.
Prof Pearson, told BBC News: “What we have found is an emperor. He was a figure thought to have been a fake and written off by the experts.
“But we think he was real and that he had a role in history.”