While the only Thracian inscription known so far remains the one on the golden ring brought to light in 1912, in Ezerovo, near Philippopolis, the possibility cannot be ruled out of finding other inscriptions in this language in the not too distant future. At least two important discoveries have been made recently on the territory of ancient Thrace: the richly decorated royal tomb, near Kazanlak, dating from the third century B.C., which was found in 1944, and the objects excavated at the site of Seuthopolis, a city which seems to have gone down in flames around 229 B.C., after a life of some 130 years. The site was allowed to disappear at the bottom of a man-made lake, following the completion of a hydro-electric project in 1954. Prior to that, valuable archaeological material had been recovered, including more than 1,100 ancient coins, and an interesting inscription in Greek, concerning relations between Thrace and Macedon.