Europe Travel: Newly Released Map Reignites Quest For $18 Million Nazi Treasure
The story is a common one—that the Nazis hid a stash of treasure as they retreated from occupied territory at the end of World War Two. In the Netherlands, near the town of Arnhem, legend has it that four German soldiers hid treasure worth at least 2 or 3 million in Dutch guilder in 1945, which today would be worth around $18 million.
80 years later, the National Archives of the Netherlands has just released lots of documents which researchers believe will literally mark the spot where the money was buried. There is one catch—the map is somewhere amongst 1,300 documents. What's more, there is one that is 7 centimetres thick, and documents the Dutch government's search for the money after the war, but they weren't able to retrieve it.
Imagine it is April, 1945 and the Allies are close to liberating the city of Arnhem. 25 miles away, in the small village of Ommeren, some soldiers in the German Wehrmacht are getting nervous about the four ammunition cases they have amongst their belongings, full of watches, gems, coins and jewellery. Annet Waalkens, an adviser at the National Archives told The Guardian that "they decide to bury the treasure, because it’s just getting a bit too hot under their feet and they’re getting scared."
A certain German soldier, Helmut S, helped to bury the loot and was apparently a little bit too keen to tell everyone upon his return to Berlin. He told people there that the soldiers came across the treasure on the streets when the Arnhem branch of the Rotterdamsche bank was bombed in August 1944.
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