Treasure hunters seeking £200million of Nazi gold claim they’ve found 4-ton haul in ‘canister’ buried under SS brothel

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TREASURE hunters digging for Nazi gold have uncovered a four ton haul worth £200million in a secret SS brothel bunker, it is claimed. The gold is said to have been found in a metal canister which was lying 10ft below the surface of an 18th century palace close to Wroclaw in southern Poland. Not known, clear with picture deskTreasure hunters had been digging at the Minkowskie palace[/caption] Not known, clear with picture deskThe gold is said to have been found in a metal canister[/caption] The dig which began in May last year at the Minkowskie palace which was used by Hitler’s SS as a brothel, is hoping to uncover 10 tons of Nazi gold along with other valuables in the grounds. Gold-diggers, The Silesian Bridge Foundation, has said it had it found the canister using geo-radar after pinpointing the location with the help of an old SS diary. Measuring between about 4ft and 5ft long and 20 inches in diameter, the hoard was uncovered in the palace conservatory. Foundation head Roman Furmaniak said: “The shapes and colours show anomalies, in other words human interference in the ground. READ MORE ON THE NAZIS PURE EVIL Horrors of evil Nazi paedo who led unit so sadistic even the SS were sickened NAZI HUNTERS Story of teen honey trap assassins who lured ‘dozens’ of Nazis to their deaths “Metal has a different density to earth, and this is shown as a darker colour in the images.” He added that the description of the object and its location match the information contained in the war diary. He said: “The first drill we made showed unnatural contortions on one side. We made a second probe and received the same result on the other side. A third probe struck an object. “Our information says that this particular deposit was hidden by an SS officer called Von Stein. “The SS planned to use it to re-establish agriculture in Ukraine to feed the new Reich.” Most read in News PAEDO STAR Doctor Strange star & husband GUILTY of sexually abusing girl, 13, for 3yrs BLOOD ON THE STREET Shocking moment boy in school uniform STABS woman laying on the ground 'SAFE AND WELL' Twin schoolgirls, 11, found after going missing from their village home TRAITOR IN THE VILLAGE Special forces swoop on woman accused of helping Russian invaders FROM BEYOND US aircraft carrier 'stalked by 40ft ball of fire UFO seen by HUNDREDS of crew' SENT TO THEIR DEATH Sun man finds corpses of Russian troops as Putin views victory charade The treasure is believed to have been stolen on the orders of SS boss Heinrich Himmler towards the end of WWII to set up a Fourth Reich. It is thought to include the so-called ‘Gold of Breslau’ which went missing from police headquarters in what is now the nearby Polish city of Wrocław. The Minkowskie palace is the first location that the foundation has searched.   According to the diary, an astonishing quantity of gold, art, valuables and religious artefacts were stashed away in safe hiding places across Lower Silesia to avoid them falling into the hands of the advancing Red Army. The foundation says they identified the spot using secret documents and a treasure map that it received from the descendants of Waffen SS officers belonging to a secretive lodge that dates back over 1,000 years. The cache of documents includes a wartime diary of an SS officer which identifies eleven locations of WWII treasure hidden in the last months of the war. The Minkowskie palace is the first location that the foundation has searched.   The officer, named in the diary as Michaelis, was said to be the link between senior SS officers and local aristocrats who wanted help to protect their property from the Soviets. The loot apparently includes works by Botticelli, Rubens, Cezanne, Carravagio, Monet, Dürer, Rafael and Rembrandt. Other deposits are said to contain gold coins, medals, jewellery and valuables deposited by wealthy people in the city to the local Nazi police for safekeeping. The Silesian Bridge Foundation is now waiting for permission to raise the canister to the surface. Permission also needs to be obtained from army sappers as the foundation says that the hiding place could have been boobytrapped by the SS. Read More on The Sun WHAT THE CLUCK? I work at Nando's – here are the customers that come into the restaurant 'Love conquers all' Jesy Nelson shows off MORE new tattoos saying she's 'obsessed' The process will likely take months, Furmaniak said. The palace in Minkowskie is the first of 11 sites across Lower Silesia identified in the pencil-written pages of the diary held by the Foundation, which has taken out a 10-year-lease on the building. AlamyNazis serving Adolf Hitler are thought to have hidden the treasure[/caption] Not known, clear with picture deskA visualisation of what the area might have looked like when the canister was buried[/caption]