Irish Sunday Mirror

€100m hoard of the real-life Indiana Jones

- BY JANINE YAQOOB TV Editor

HE doesn’t crack a whip, no serpent rears its head and, no, a 20-ton ball does not hurtle towards him inside a tomb.

But Hamilton White does have a fedora hat and something Indiana Jones could only have dreamed of... a €100MILLION treasure trove dating back to the 1200s.

The antiquitie­s hunter has spent 10 years painstakin­gly piecing together more than 100 pieces from a collection believed to have belonged to the Knights Templar.

It includes a libation cup, a sword which bears three Templar crosses, a helmet and an Obsidian chalice.

White and his fellow hunter Carl Cookson describe the collection as the most important since the discovery of Egyptian boy king Tutankhamu­n’s tomb in 1922.

They believe the hoard – which the Nazis came painstakin­gly close to snaffling – could even reshape our view of the Templars.

White, 49, says: “Everybody has been looking for these for 800 years, so they’re bound to be controvers­ial. People want to know how we’ve got them.

“The items could rewrite Templar history. They prove ceremonies certainly existed. There were rumours these mixing vessels were used to mix psychotrop­ic drugs.

UNEARTHED

“We believe the sword belonged to the last Grand Master, from 1291.”

The Order of the Knights Templar was founded in the 12th century to protect Christian pilgrims travelling to the Holy Land.

It was Europe’s biggest standing army since the Roman Empire but within 200 years it had disappeare­d.

No major Templar artefacts have been found – until now.

Self-made millionair­es Hamilton and Cookson have been on a voyage of discovery to check the authentici­ty of their haul and chart the history behind it.

The collection was unearthed in the 1960s when treasure hunters stumbled across the items at the site of a Templars’ base in Portugal.

Not knowing what they were, the items were sold to dealers across the world.

Hamilton says: “They must not have realised the value and sold the items piece by piece.

“I’ve spent the last 10 years carefully tracking down the items and putting the hoard back together.

“It’s so valuable it’s impossible to insure. It’s hidden at a secure location. It’s a very difficult job to value something like this.

“Others have been keen to put numbers on it.

“They may be right to suggest north of €100million is an attainable figure in the art market.

“A tiny 13th century painting in France recently made over €20million. This was a single early medieval item. What I have is 100 items – and

HUNT Millionair­e Carl Cookson many are far more significan­t than this French find. Anyway, they aren’t for sale!” Hamilton is speaking after four decades of collecting antiques – having started buying and selling with his pocket money at the age of eight. In his private hoard he has mammoth tusks from Russia that are 20-30,000 years old, a Tudor mallet and a piece of Henry VIII’S warship Mary Rose. He says: “My most treasured are pieces of Celtic gold. I have Nazi memorabili­a and loot, even

Nazi bullion bars. It naturally morphed into an obsession. I’d say I have a bit of OCD.”

That obsession has been an asset as he and property millionair­e Cookson – the pair met while living in Monaco – set their sights on the Templars’ cache. White, who hails from the Midlands, was fascinated that Cookson owned a former Knights Templar property in Aubeterre, France. “It started our voyage of discovery,” he says.

Cookson – Liverpool-born but now based in Surrey – helped finance the search and joins White as they reveal the artefacts on TV.

And White reveals how close the Nazis came to finding the stash in the 1930s as they searched for the Holy Grail – the cup that Jesus

drank from at the Last Supper. Records show that Otto Jahn – recruited by SS leader Heinrich Himmler to hunt for sacred relics – was searching the Convent of Christ in Tomar, Portugal, with his team.

Remarkably, they never found the hoard – and so it laid undiscover­ed until the 1960s.

White and Cookson’s journey took them across Europe from London through Paris, Portugal and on to the Templars’ headquarte­rs in Jerusalem.

The Templars were outlawed in 1307 after being accused of heresy, denying Christ and worshippin­g idols.

King Philip IV of France seized their property – but the treasures are believed to have been grabbed by knights who managed to escape.

White is still working through the collection and trying to figure out how each item was used. Next, he plans to put the hoard on display.

He continues: “We’re still on a journey of the relics. The chalice is made from volcanic glass. Could it represent the Holy Grail?

PROOF

“On the marble libation there are strange heads. Could it be that they were worshiping false idols?

“I will continue to learn more as the in-depth science goes on behind the scenes. The journey has just begun as we keep investigat­ing these finds to establish proof beyond any doubt that the items are what I know them to be.

“It was always the intention to bring them into the public domain. The great adventure of finding them all was stage one.

“A huge amount of conservati­on has been required and is ongoing. Many of the objects are very delicate and it can take months per item to deal with them to get up to a museum standard. “This process has been going on for several years.” White, who owns the The Heritage Museum of the Bahamas – housing many of his private collection­s – went on: “We did hope to display the hoard as part of the programme launch with the HISTORY channel but Covid-19 and social distancing regulation­s prevented that. “The Templar Hoard will go out on public display once conservati­on of the items is completed and a suitable venue is found. “Several countries have already expressed an interest. “But there is plenty of work to Historian Dan Jones complete before any decision on this is made.”

Historian Dan Jones is fascinated by the collection. He says: “The Templars were one of the most famous and notorious, organisati­ons in western history. They emerged from the crusades and amassed huge wealth and property across Europe.

“When they were wiped out between 1307 and 1312 most of their riches were either stolen or destroyed.

“People have been searching for Templar ‘treasure’ – real and imaginary – for generation­s, generally without finding very much.

“Hamilton and Carl have some intriguing finds and it’s going to be exciting to see what they discover.”

janine.yaqoob@mirror.co.uk Lost Relics of the Knights Templar is on HISTORY Channel tomorrow, 9pm.

I’ve spent 10 years tracking down this hoard. It’s hidden away and is not for sale!

HAMILTON WHITE TREASURE HUNTER ON AMAZING COLLECTION

 ??  ?? ADVENTURER
Treasure hunter Jones, alias Harrison Ford
ADVENTURER Treasure hunter Jones, alias Harrison Ford
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 ??  ?? SWORD Mighty steel weapon is among the collection
SWORD Mighty steel weapon is among the collection
 ??  ?? VOLCANIC CHALICE Knights’ cup carved from obsidian rock millions of years old
MISSION
Knights defended holy sites
MYSTIQUE OF THE MASK The Knights Templar wore steel helmets when called into battle
THE HAT FITS
Hamilton White in Fedora, like Indiana Jones
VOLCANIC CHALICE Knights’ cup carved from obsidian rock millions of years old MISSION Knights defended holy sites MYSTIQUE OF THE MASK The Knights Templar wore steel helmets when called into battle THE HAT FITS Hamilton White in Fedora, like Indiana Jones
 ??  ?? EXCITED
EXCITED
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