I was in a museum recently in Germany (Koblenz) that had a display of mostly silver coins, unearthed during a building project.
What's interesting is that researchers could figure out exactly what year it was that the hoard was buried - it was 1688, during a period of turmoil and war (attack from France). All the coins were fairly similar in age, and the latest was minted in1688.
I've come across this numerous times in musuems, and in reading historical texts. Hoards like these are buried during revolutions and wars, and forgotten. Or the person that buried them got killed in the bad times, and so they remained buried.
It shows up in literature as well. Samuel Pepys’ diary entry for 13 June 1667 records a request to his wife to bury the family’s savings in their Northamptonshire garden (the Dutch were attacking southeastern England). Though presumably they were dug up again.
Obviously the "inheritance plan" of the people that buried the hoards were not well thought out. Very likely it was a time of panic and confusion, lots of uncertainty.
I wonder what will happen with some of the "hoards" of bitcoin that current holders have. Do most people have well developed inheritance plans? I really doubt it.
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People dont think they will die. They bury it fully expecting to come back to it and dig it up.
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Human nature doesn't change. I'm sure we'll see many Bitcoin fortunes tragically lost in such a manner.
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Millions of Bitcoins have already been lost along the way, and they will continue to be lost, okay, before Bitcoin did not have the fiat price it has now, but people will continue to be just as responsible, you can already see the number of people who invest in Bitcoin and do not even want to think about self-custody, it is better that a third party owns them...
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A major institution is going to lose their keys. It's going to happen.
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100% gonna happen. purposefully or accidentally.
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It would be devastating, for those who don't wanna own their Bitcoins.
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There are lots of silver coins of Latvia before WWII available on the markets currently. Reason is that most of them were buried and hidden by people around 1939. In such amount that in 1940 Latvian government event released paper banknotes of 5 lats, as all silver coins, which were default for that amount (there were no paper banknotes below 10 lats before), were out of circulation.
Gresham's law.
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In times of war you plan for the immediate future only.
Hell, I've been close to doing this with some of my gold the past years myself!
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Maybe 10-20% have well-developed inheritence plans tops.
Can you imagine in the year 2500 finding 12 words on a piece of paper with 7 bitcoin?
That would be priceless then, figuring bitcoin does what it is supposed to.
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holders can vary widely depending on individual and market dynamics.
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back in the days in some religion or culture people buried their treasure as offering to deities as a part of ritual
Overall, burying coins was a practical response to the uncertainties and risks of the times in which people lived
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More bitcoin will continue to be lost when people pass away, get too casual with their set up or set things up too complicated.
The only difference is that they'll likely never be discovered, but only viewed on the time chain as unspent for many decades
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