There is Procopius (c. 500 - c. 565) a prominent Roman scholar who is commonly held to be the last major historian of the ancient world. According to Procopius, Geiseric took the temple treasure which was the returned to Jerusalem. This claim has lead scholars, archaeologists and treasure-hunters to try to piece together the trail to God's Gold. however, after 1500 years, it's trail that has invariably led to frustration and failure, often destroying the lives of those who have become obsessed with following it to the end.

        There is Cassiodorus (c. 485 - c. 585) a scholar, a prominent statesman without he Ostrogoth administration, and writer of the most detailed history of the Goths, Gothic History (5 26-533). It is believed that his worked described exactly what happened during the sack of Rome by Alaric and Geiseric, but unfortunately all the volumes are lost. The only clue we have regarding the contents of Cassiodorus's Gothic History comes from an unscholarly book review written in 551 by a bureaucrat named Jordanes who couldn't even write in classical Latin. The work is casual, breezy and has not been taken very seriously by most academics.

        However, modern analysis of the text has discovered a clue - there is a text inside the text. There are passages written in classical Ciceronian Latin which could not have been composed by Jordanes himself. These passages are believed to have been copied directly from Cassiodorus, and one of them refers explicitly to Alaric - not just that he made off with the treasure of Rome, but that he was buried with it. The text then states exactly where he was buried. So why hasn't the gold been found?  Others have looked exactly where Jordanes tells us but have found nothing. The  trail of failure is as long as those who have followed Procopius and it has only confirmed the suspicion that Jordane's review is not to be trusted.

        However, since 1985 when the last search of the location was conducted, modern technology has come a long way. We believe that with modern forensic techniques we can find King Alaric's burial site - and with it, God's Gold.

Our search for God’s Gold is cutting edge Archeology. In the last ten years there have been significant High-Tech advances in Archeology beyond the traditional Electromagnetic metal detector. We now have pulse induction metal detectors. Ground penetrating radar (GPR) and the Overhauser proton precession magnetometer (PPM) which can detect metals and manmade forms deeper in the ground and more accurately than ever before. None of this technology has ever been used before to locate King Alaric's Tomb before. We intend to be the first.

Along the way our quest will lead to the unexpected - to a deeper realm where the quest itself began, and follow the quests of those who have gone before us. This adventure takes on a significance of its own as we search for “God’s Gold.

This timely adventure is a prime candidate for Smithsonian, A&E, Discovery and many more television outlets in North America and around the world. It will be available for digital viewing to over 2 Billion people.