Nazi Gold Hunters Believe SS Officer's Letter May Reveal ANOTHER Lost Treasure

Experts have transcribed a letter from an SS officer who may uncover the mystery behind stolen WWII artifacts and priceless artwork< /p> Raphael - Portrait of a young man While Raphael's Portrait of a Young Man was Stolen, Its Location Remains Unclear

Experts searching for Adolf Hitler's hidden gold have claimed that Nazi descendants may have delivered an important letter, which they believe may reveal another lost treasure.

A team from a non-profit organization in Opole, Poland, searched for £200 million worth of Hitler's gold in the grounds of an 18th-century palace in Poland.

The Silesian Bridge Foundation group claims that Nazi descendants have now produced a newspaper owned by a member of the feared paramilitary political force of the Third Reich, the Schutzstaffel.

Written by a former Waffen-SS officer using the pseudonym "Michaelis", the diary was in the possession of a secret society for decades after the end of World War II.

Fragment of an aging letter written by an SS officer
Only the last page of the letter has been transcribed so far (

Picture:

Silesian Bridge Foundation)

And now, a fragment of an aging letter - which may have been recovered from inside the diary - may go on to reveal the mystery behind WWII's most valuable riches, stolen artifacts and works of priceless art, reports.

Apparently the letter - which was apparently addressed to a friend - refers to a long-lost 16th-century painting called the Portrait of a Young Man, which was made by Italian artist Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino - who is more commonly referred to as Raphael.

The famous painter's work was later seized by Gestapo secret police agents after the German invasion of Poland in 1939.

In the letter from 1947, "Michaelis" wrote that he had hidden the incredible painting somewhere...

Nazi Gold Hunters Believe SS Officer's Letter May Reveal ANOTHER Lost Treasure

Experts have transcribed a letter from an SS officer who may uncover the mystery behind stolen WWII artifacts and priceless artwork< /p> Raphael - Portrait of a young man While Raphael's Portrait of a Young Man was Stolen, Its Location Remains Unclear

Experts searching for Adolf Hitler's hidden gold have claimed that Nazi descendants may have delivered an important letter, which they believe may reveal another lost treasure.

A team from a non-profit organization in Opole, Poland, searched for £200 million worth of Hitler's gold in the grounds of an 18th-century palace in Poland.

The Silesian Bridge Foundation group claims that Nazi descendants have now produced a newspaper owned by a member of the feared paramilitary political force of the Third Reich, the Schutzstaffel.

Written by a former Waffen-SS officer using the pseudonym "Michaelis", the diary was in the possession of a secret society for decades after the end of World War II.

Fragment of an aging letter written by an SS officer
Only the last page of the letter has been transcribed so far (

Picture:

Silesian Bridge Foundation)

And now, a fragment of an aging letter - which may have been recovered from inside the diary - may go on to reveal the mystery behind WWII's most valuable riches, stolen artifacts and works of priceless art, reports.

Apparently the letter - which was apparently addressed to a friend - refers to a long-lost 16th-century painting called the Portrait of a Young Man, which was made by Italian artist Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino - who is more commonly referred to as Raphael.

The famous painter's work was later seized by Gestapo secret police agents after the German invasion of Poland in 1939.

In the letter from 1947, "Michaelis" wrote that he had hidden the incredible painting somewhere...

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