The safest private money in history 647 years later

Mondo Social Updated on 2024-01-29

Private money, an old and modern topic, seems to have always had a place in the family. Where is the safest place to hide private money? Perhaps this question has long been pushed into the depths of history by time.

In today's society, people's views on private money seem to have become indifferent, and there are even some funny elements. While people complain about their families hiding private money, they appreciate the humor more. On the Internet, it is common to see people posting the hiding place of private money, and generally speaking, everyone tends to hide it in various containers. However, this method has long been outdated, and today's way of hiding private money is ingenious and catches people off guard, and what I want to see most is the surprised expression of people when they learn that this place hides private money.

However, at the end of the day, the safest private money may be no private money. The concept of private money has existed since ancient times, but it has not been treated with such humor. In ancient times, their way of hiding money was mainly concentrated in some containers, and they were extremely hidden containers. During an appreciation of cultural relics, experts found that a container actually contained a silver stamp from that time. And an Australian artist, when verifying a wood carving in the Ming Dynasty of China, also found a private money hidden in it.

Did the foreign artist's discovery make him sneer at the Chinese? Perhaps in ancient times, both in China and abroad, people were Xi to hide wealth in special places. According to experts, this silver ticket can be traced back to the period of Zhu Yuanzhang in the Ming Dynasty, 647 years ago. This ancient silver ticket is folded into small squares and cleverly stuffed into a wood carving. As for the original intention of the person who made the wood carving, it is impossible to verify it now. Some people speculate that it was for sacrificial purposes, while others believe that it was for private money, but it inadvertently became a precious cultural relic.

This silver ticket, the years of wood carving, has been rediscovered, and what kind of thinking will it bring us?

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