Skip to main content

The Court Jester Whose Wit Saved His Life

How a court jester slapped the king's butt, then brilliantly convinced him not to kill him Triboulet served as court jester under King Francis I, who ruled France from 1515 to 1547 . Triboulet's quick humor rescued him from Francis I's deadly wrath, not once, but twice. Court jesters hold a unique place in history. Playing the fool for kings and queens meant they were always in close proximity to royalty, but so very far from their rank and station. Comedians often like to push boundaries, but that can be a dangerous business when your job is to entertain the peope who have executioners at their beck and call. Especially when you forget your place—or purposely ignore it, as the case may be—and playfully smack the reigning monarch square on the behind. That little whoopsie was the claim to fame of Triboulet, a court jester who served King Francis I in 16th-century France. But it was how he got away with slapping the king on the butt and living to tell about it that earne...

Couple find over 1 million copper pennies

Couple find over 1 million copper pennies while clearing out an old family home

Couple find over 1 million copper pennies


A couple have unearthed a million copper pennies while clearing out an old family home.

You come across all manner of weird and wonderful things while clearing out houses.

Anyone who has visited a clearance yard or had to clear out an attic knows all manner of strange things can surface, especially in older houses that have been lived in for a long time.

The bags and bags of pennies.


It could be a big find, like a particularly rare first edition book or valuable artefact. There's also the more unsettling, like collections of taxidermy, human remains, or even occult artefacts.

Some mean you have to call the police, others an exorcist.

However, John Reyes and his family have come across a fascinating and wholly unexpected find in his father-in-law's home.

It turned out that there was a collection of one million copper pennies stashed away in the house. Even taking them at face value that's a pretty decent haul of $10,000.

But these are not just any ordinary pennies. As they haven't even been touched for decades, let alone catalogued, there's no knowing whether a particularly rare coin is buried somewhere in the pile. Given that they are older pennies, the collection has been valued at $25,000, some 2.5x its face value.

There were around one million pennies at the house.


Mr Reyes told NBC LA: “These have literally been untouched for decades, and I think that’s the super unique part about it.

“We started going through the arduous process of looking at the pennies and that quickly turned into, ‘We don’t know what we are doing.’ And then we decided to pop open a couple of beers and have those instead."

The family believe that Mr Reyes' father-in-law could have assembled the collection to sell the metal due to the coins' high copper content. The only problem with this collection is finding somewhere to store it.

Many of us have felt the embarrassment of having to pay in a pub with small change, so imagine having to find a way to look after a million pennies. It's a fair bit more than just emptying the loose change jar!

Coins can fetch some incredible prices at auction. In 2010, a penny from 1943 was sold at auction for $1.7 million, or 170 million times its face value. Not a bad mark up.

The most expensive coin sold at auction according to the Guinness Book of World Records is the 1933 Double Eagle. In 2021, the coin with a face value of $20 sold for a whopping $18,872,250 at Sotheby's in New York.

They may not have quite struck gold, but copper isn't bad either.




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Court Jester Whose Wit Saved His Life

How a court jester slapped the king's butt, then brilliantly convinced him not to kill him Triboulet served as court jester under King Francis I, who ruled France from 1515 to 1547 . Triboulet's quick humor rescued him from Francis I's deadly wrath, not once, but twice. Court jesters hold a unique place in history. Playing the fool for kings and queens meant they were always in close proximity to royalty, but so very far from their rank and station. Comedians often like to push boundaries, but that can be a dangerous business when your job is to entertain the peope who have executioners at their beck and call. Especially when you forget your place—or purposely ignore it, as the case may be—and playfully smack the reigning monarch square on the behind. That little whoopsie was the claim to fame of Triboulet, a court jester who served King Francis I in 16th-century France. But it was how he got away with slapping the king on the butt and living to tell about it that earne...

Arne Cheyenne Johnson

Arne Cheyenne Johnson: The Devil Made Me Do It Arne Cheyenne Johnson claimed that possession by the Devil had led him to murder Born on February 26, 1952, Arne Cheyenne Johnson holds a somewhat strange claim to fame. He was the first person in the United States to claim demonic possession as a defense in a criminal trial. After being arrested for the murder of his landlord, Alan Bono, in 1981 Johnson claimed, “the Devil made him do it”. Unsurprisingly, his trial became a media sensation at the time and Johnson became a household name. Amazingly, two famous paranormal investigators, Ed and Lorraine Warren, came to his defense, arguing at trial that Johnson truly was possessed. For decades this has left some wondering if Johnson was guilty or if the devil really made him do it. The Murder To an outsider, it would seem everything was going okay for Arne Johnson in early 1981. He was happily engaged to Debbie Glatzel, had just moved into a new home, and was working as a tree surgeon at...

Sending kids in the mail

When People Used the Postal Service to ‘Mail’ Their Children A U.S. POSTMAN CARRYING A BABY BOY ALONG WITH HIS LETTERS In the early days of U.S. parcel service, there weren’t clear guidelines about what you could and couldn’t mail. In January 1913, one Ohio couple took advantage of the U.S. Postal Service’s new parcel service to make a very special delivery: their infant son. The Beagues paid 15 cents for his stamps and an unknown amount to insure him for $50, then handed him over to the mailman, who dropped the boy off at his grandmother’s house about a mile away. Regulations about what you could and couldn’t send through the mail were vague when post offices began accepting parcels over four pounds on January 1, 1913. People immediately started testing its limits by mailing eggs, bricks, snakes and other unusual “packages.” So were people allowed to mail their children? Technically, there was no postal regulation against it. “The first few years of parcel post service—it was a bi...