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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TOO-TUM |
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TREASURE TROVE , the legal expression for coin, bullion, gold or silver articles, found (Fr. trouve) hidden in the earth, for which no owner can be discovered. In Roman law it was called thesaurus
system
coroner
larceny
larceny
statute
coroner
long time." The Coroners Act of 1887 continues this power as heretofore. In Scotland the law is the same, but the concealment is not a criminal offence; it is there the duty of the king's and lord treasurer's remembrancer
In the United States the common law, following English precedent, would seem to give treasure trove to the public treasury, but in practice the finder has been allowed to keep it. In Louisiana French codes have been followed, so that one-half goes to finder and one-half to owner of land. Modern French law is the same as this, as it is also in Germany, in Italy and in Spain. In the latter country formerly the state had three-quarters, whilst a quarter was given to the finder. In Austria a third goes to the finder, a third to the owner of the land, and a third to the state, and provision is made for the possible purchase of valuable antiquities by the state. In Denmark treasure trove is known as " treasure of Denmark," and is the property of the king alone. In Russia the usage varies. In one or two of the governments, in Poland and the Baltic provinces, the treasure is divided between the owner of the land and the finder, but throughout the rest of Russia it belongs exclusively to the owner of the land. This was also the law amongst the ancient Hebrews, or so Grotius infers from the parable of the treasure hid in a field (Matt. xiii. 44). See Blackstone's Commentaries; Chitty
Wellington , The King's Coroner (1905-1906); Rankine on Landownership; Murray, Archaeological Survey of the United Kingdom (1896), containing copious references to the literature of the subject. (F. WA.)End of Article: TREASURE TROVE If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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