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EN
Between 2016 and 2021 the Slovak National Museum – Historical museum, together with the National Bank of Slovakia – Museum of coins and medals, acquired 392 numismatic objects from Muráň Castle. A hoard of 360 Hungarian Ferdinand I denarii, hidden around 1554, was found directly on castle grounds. Ottoman penetration into the area may have precipitated the creation of the hoard. Besides the cache, finds at Muráň also include 21 other numismatic artefacts such as Hungarian denarii and their forgeries, Czech and Polish-Silesian coins, two interesting Nuremberg counting tokens and one reliquary with the letters MAR.
EN
Several sites with rich findings are known from the area of the Púchov culture with a wide range of findings. They include a mass finding from the central Považie region, from the hitherto little-known site of Podskalie, on the flank of the Veľké skaly hill in the district of Považská Bystrica. It contains two examples of a hitherto unknown, new type of belt hook, a belt ornament and a pseudo-filigree basket amulet. A key, lock spring, cramp irons and two knives were also found. Several Celtic coins in circulation on the territory of the Púchov culture also come from this site, namely the Divinka, Nitra, Veľký Bysterec types, the Slovak or Kolačno type, the Liptovská Mara and Simmering types. The hoard and the coins date the site to the late La Tène period LTD.
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Nález fenigov zo začiatku 14. Storočia z Banky

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EN
A total of 147 medieval coins were discovered in July 2020, near a forest. These were chiefly Vienna pfennig mintages from Ottokar II (1251–1276) to Frederick the Fair as Duke (1306–1314). One pfennig appears to be from either Bavaria or the Archbischopric of Salzburg. The only coin from Germany proper is a Nuremberg pfennig from the 13th century. The hoard was likely hidden around 1306–1314 and may have been connected to unrest following the accession Charles Robert to the throne and his subsequent battles with various oligarchs, mainly Matthew Csák.
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Súbor nálezov z hradu Teplica

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EN
The Teplica castle near the village of Sklené Teplice is one of the less known medieval castles in the central Pohronie region. So far it hasn’t been the subject of thorough archaeological excavations, but we just have some finds from conducted survey. Its origin presumably dates back to 13th or 14th century, although there are no genuine written sources confirming it. The castle was most intensively inhabited notably in the second half of the 15th century, as documented from original sources dating back to that period. Back then it was under the control of the Brotherhood (Hussite warriors) led by Ján Jiskra of Brandýs. It is confirmed also by archaeological and numismatic finds, incl. the late Gothic seal presented in this paper. The castle started to lose its importance at the beginning of the 16th century and it got extinct in the second half of the 16th century.
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