Just in time for Saint Patrick’s Day — two construction workers in Holland have discovered a real-life “pot o’ gold.”

The workers from water company Oasen made the stunning find when they were laying pipe in the new town of Hoef and Haag, in the province of Utrecht, Live Science reports.

During the construction work, they dug up a medieval cooking pot that contained 12 gold and 462 silver coins. The coins have been dated to the 15th century. It’s unclear at this point who will keep the coins.

After finding the pot, “it literally and figuratively rained coins,” the company explained in a press release translated via Google Translate.

The coins, which were stuck together, had turned green.

When the utility workers called in their boss, he reported the discovery to the archaeology hotline for Landschap Erfgoed Utrecht (Landscape Heritage Utrecht).

RTV Utrecht reported that experts immediately visited the site and used a metal detector to recover all the coins.

Some of the coins were found with textiles, which had apparently been used as a sort of protective roll.

The coins were transferred to the Omgevingsdienst regio Utrecht (Regional Environment Agency Utrecht) for analysis by archaeologist Peter de Boer, according to RTV Utrecht.

Most of the coins date back to the 1470s and 1480s. Notable artifacts among the hoard include a rare “Salut d’or” gold coin of King Henry VI of England and France that was struck in Paris in the early 15th century.

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Coins from David of Burgundy, a 15th century bishop of Utrecht, and Pope Paul II, were also found.

Details of the discovery, which was made in August 2017, were revealed in a press event in the Dutch city of Vianen earlier this month.

In its statement, Oasen said a number of the coins will be cleaned during the coming weeks. They will then be analyzed by experts at De Nederlandsche Bank, Holland’s central bank.

Coins offer a fascinating glimpse into history and can shed new light onto the economic, cultural and political life of previous eras.

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Last year, for example, archaeologists in the U.K. announced the discovery of a rare Roman coin that was discovered on a remote Scottish island, 200 miles beyond the northern edge of the Roman Empire. In 2016, archaeologists were stunned to discover Roman coins in the ruins of a Japanese castle, prompting speculation that the coins were brought to Japan via trade routes linking the West to Asia.

In 2013, hundreds of ancient coins were discovered in a Byzantine-era refuse pit in Israel.

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