A public transit official working for the city of Leeds found the coin while counting bus and tram fares. Now, his grandson has donated it to Leeds Museums and Galleries ...
In the 1950s, a passenger in Leeds, England, boarded a bus and paid their fare with a funny-looking coin. For the bus driver, ...
An ancient Phoenician coin once used as a bus fare in England, is now identified as a 2,000-year-old artifact.
An ancient Phoenician coin more than 2,000 years old, once unknowingly used to pay a bus fare in the British city of Leeds, has now ...
A coin once used to pay a bus fare in Leeds has been identified as a 2,000-year-old Carthaginian coin from Spain and is now part of the Leeds Museums collection.
SOME of us remember when Genovia's Queen Clarisse Renaldi said, "No, it's not appropriate for royalty to jingle," referring ...
A 2,000-year-old Carthaginian coin minted in ancient Cádiz was unknowingly used to pay a bus fare in Leeds in the 1950s before being donated to Leeds Museums and Galleries.
The origins of a bronze coin that someone used to pay for a bus journey in Leeds in the 1950s have been revealed after more than 70 years. The remarkable piece was discovered by James Edwards, who ...
Apple turns 50. Ronald Wayne left for $800. Mike Markkula invested $250,000 and wrote the 88 words that became the company's ...
More than a thousand years after a ship vanished off the coast of modern-day Croatia, archaeologists have uncovered a wreck that might reshape our ideas of the medieval world.
A former deep-sea treasure hunter who spent more than a decade in prison after refusing to disclose the whereabouts of ...
Not every window into the past looks like a museum display. Sometimes it’s a stash tucked into a hillside—quiet, deliberate, and meant to be found ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results