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AMBER HOARD

Amateur treasure hunters ‘find £225m Amber Room buried under booby-trapped German mountains’ after it was looted by Nazis

They say the hoard  lies inside a a secret cave in the Hartenstein hills near Dresden

A HUGE hunt has been given the go ahead in Germany to search for the single most valuable treasure looted by the Nazis in WW2.

A trio of amateur sleuths are convinced the missing Amber Room of the Russian Tsars lies inside a cave in the Hartenstein hills near Dresden.

 A view of the recreated amber room in the Tsarskoe Selo Palace in St Petersburg
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A view of the recreated amber room in the Tsarskoe Selo Palace in St PetersburgCredit: AFP

Third Reich scientists used the cave complex during the war - but all records of just what went on there have mysteriously vanished from local archives.

Now homeopath Leonhard Blume, 73, scientist Günter Eckardt, 67, and georadar specialist Peter Lohr, 71, believe they know where the treasure lies.

Lohr used specialist radar imaging to detect underground booby traps and what appear to be bunkers under the soil.

He scanned the hill in September after Lohr claimed a "reliable source" told him of the missing treasure's whereabouts in 2001.

 The Amber Room was a masterpiece of baroque art widely regarded as the world’s most important art treasure
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The Amber Room was a masterpiece of baroque art widely regarded as the world’s most important art treasureCredit: Getty - Contributor
 It was originally presented to Peter the Great in 1716 by the King of Prussia
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It was originally presented to Peter the Great in 1716 by the King of PrussiaCredit: Alamy
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"The hideout is underground is above the railway line, where in April 1945 a train from Königsberg was stopped," he said.

Königsberg, now Kaliningrad belonging to Russia, was formerly the capital of East Prussia where the Amber Room was once stored.

He also said he has evidence that treasure belonging to the last monarch of Imperial Germany - Kaiser Wilhelm II who went into exile in Holland in 1918 after his defeat in WW1 - is also stored in the complex.

Eckardt said: "We discovered traces where steel ropes were used to haul up crates.  Georadar and dowsing measurements reveal a a system of secret tunnels beneath the cave system itself."

Crafted entirely out of amber, gold and precious stones the Amber Room was a masterpiece of baroque art and widely regarded as the world’s most important art treasure.

Its whereabouts has been a mystery since the dying days of the Second World War.

 It was originally lit by 565 candles whose light was reflected in the warm gold surface of the amber
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It was originally lit by 565 candles whose light was reflected in the warm gold surface of the amberCredit: Reuters

It was presented to Peter the Great in 1716 by the King of Prussia. Later, Catherine the Great commissioned a new generation of craftsmen to embellish the room and moved it from the Winter Palace in St Petersburg to her new summer abode in Tsarskoye Selo, outside the city.

"When the work was finished, in 1770, the room was dazzling," wrote the art historians Konstantin Akinsha and Grigorii Kozlov.

"It was illuminated by 565 candles whose light was reflected in the warm gold surface of the amber and sparkled in the mirrors, gilt, and mosaics."

German troops who invaded the Soviet Union in July 1941 stole it and sent it back to the Reich.

After the war, the Amber Room became central Europe's El Dorado, a quest that enthralled the wealthy and the poor alike.

Given that the bulk of the booty looted for Adolf Hitler’s planned museum of world culture in Linz was found in salt mines in Austria, the Nazis could well have transported the Amber Room 500 miles from Königsberg to a locale deep inside Germany.

Fundraising is now underway to permit a more detailed examination of the terrain beginning in the new year.

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