Around 2,000 gold and silver coins worth around €90,000 (£78,000; $104,000) were stolen during a raid at another French museum – just hours after the audacious theft of some of the French crown jewels at the Louvre in Paris.
The incident happened at a museum dedicated to French philosopher Denis Diderot in Landres, north-eastern France on Sunday night.
When the Maison des Lumières (House of Enlightenment) opened on Tuesday, workers noticed a smashed display case and raised the alarm, officials said. The coins were selected with “great expertise”, a statement to French media from the local authority said.
It is the latest in a recent string of heists at cultural institutions across France.
The stolen coins date from between 1790 and 1840 and are part of the city’s private collection, after being discovered in 2011 during renovation work at the building that now houses the museum, according to local media.
Last month, criminals broke into Paris’s Natural History Museum, making off with six gold nuggets worth around €1.5m.
Credit: bbc.com








