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[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nazi-gold-bar1_7972.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:Once the biter, [[TastyGold now the bitten]].]]

->''"We'll all be rich, rich as Nazis!"''
-->-- '''Private Burns''', ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS7E22 Raging Abe Simpson and His Grumbling Grandson in 'The Curse of the Flying Hellfish']]"

Nobody likes ThoseWackyNazis, but everybody likes gold!

During the course of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, the UsefulNotes/{{Nazi|Germany}}s found themselves in possession of a large amount of gold taken/stolen from subjugated (or [[UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust genocided]]) peoples, such as their jewelry, any decorations, or sometimes literally from their mouths. Due to the economic situation in Germany just before the war, few other nations were inclined to have faith in their [=IOUs=]. So, Germany made many of its large purchases with quantities of gold, transferred to many nations and sometimes in U-boats for secrecy.

Unsurprisingly, this has excited a lot of people. Like pirates, Nazi Germany is imagined to have secreted large amounts of gold in hidden places, ripe for the avid adventurer to discover. If you find Nazi Gold, it's unequivocally yours -- like finding spare change between couch cushions. Aside from gold, the lost Nazi treasure might also include other valuables pilfered by the Nazis, such as jewelry and priceless works of art.

Half-TruthInTelevision. While discoveries are not unheard of, ''finders'' does not mean ''keepers''. The gold still has legal owners somewhere (and considering how the Nazis got some of those valuables, you'd probably be [[HatedByAll considered one of the ultimate dicks in the universe]] for not returning it to its pre-Nazi owners or their descendants). On the other hand, there is the possibility that the owners might give you a small reward for doing so (this is rare, but hardly unheard-of, particularly if you went to particular trouble to get it). In the cases of the above-pictured Reichsbank gold bars, however, it would be impossible to ever determine who it originally belonged to before the Nazis stole it and melted it down.[[note]]And not all Reichsbank gold bars were made from stolen gold; Germany ''did'' already have gold reserves before the Nazis started invading the rest of Europe.[[/note]]

A specific sub-trope of Nazi Gold, popular in central and eastern Europe, involves [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amber_Room the Amber Room]], which was evacuated from Königsberg (now Kaliningrad) and never seen since. It's generally accepted that it was accidentally destroyed when General Rokossovsky's Third Ukrainian Front ground its way through the area in the monumentally bloody East Prussian Campaign of January-April 1945, but the chaotic nature of those times makes it nearly impossible to find conclusive proof of what happened. On a more positive note, Germany and Russia worked together to recreate this room, finishing decades of work in 2003.

----
!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* The crew of the ''Manga/BlackLagoon'' are hired to recover a framed painting (rumored to have been painted by Hitler) from a sunken U-Boat in Die Rückkehr des Adlers. Revy decides to also grab whatever else of value she can take alongside the painting (such as looting an Iron Cross from the U-Boat captain's corpse), which creeps out Rock. They are then ambushed by Neo-Nazis and the painting is stolen from them. Cue the next episode where Dutch and Revy go and exterminate the Neo-Nazis and find out [[spoiler:the person (that suspiciously looks like a certain despot) that hired them was testing the Neo-Nazi group over their effectiveness over "inferior opponents," namely the black Dutch, the Jewish Benny, and the Asians Revy and Rock. The painting itself was not actually painted by Hitler, instead, a copy of records of hidden Nazi bank accounts was hidden between the painting and the backing.]]
* Towards the end of ''Manga/{{Hellsing}}'' it's shown how [[{{Ghostapo}} Millenium]] has managed to fund their organization for 60+ years. Apparently they have a massive hoard of stolen treasure, including a bunch of [[{{Squick}} silver and gold teeth]]. [[spoiler: This turns out to be the Captain's undoing, as silver from a tooth (taken from a [[UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust Jewish martyr]], natch) is just as effective as a silver bullet to a werewolf.]]
* ''Franchise/LupinIII'':
** [[Recap/LupinIIIS2E3 "To Be or Nazi Be"]]: The gang is chasing after Hitler's legacy, expecting it to be Nazi gold. [[WorthlessTreasureTwist It's not.]] The "legacy" ends up being [[OldShame embarrassing childhood tests and mediocre paintings and sketches by Hitler]].
** [[Recap/LupinIIIS2E23 "Auntie Ballistic"]]: This time, they're chasing Rommel's hidden treasure. He buried it while fighting against the British forces in Africa.
** Fujiko's last scene in ''Anime/LupinIIITheFirst'' has her motoring off in a speedboat loaded down with treasures she'd looted from the Ahnenerbe base the finale took place in. The Nazi treasure wasn't the point of the adventure, but since it was there to steal, she was hardly going to turn it down. Lupin and his gang end up leaving with nothing.
* ''Anime/LupinIIIVsCatsEye'' has Lupin mention to one of the Cat's Eye girls that he got his start as a thief stealing treasure stolen by the Nazis, and that the girl's father helped him hide it away until after the war.
* ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'': One of Zeon's many [[PuttingOnTheReich allusions to Nazi Germany]] is paying in gold. This goes back to the original ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam'', where Char gives his sister Sayla a briefcase full to retire from fighting on the opposite side of a war. ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam0083StardustMemory'' has the Delaz Fleet use what are essentially Reichsbank gold bar but with the swastika replaced by the Principality of Zeon crest.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* In the first "season" of ''ComicBook/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' comics following the television series, Buffy's had the brilliant idea of funding the Slayer organization by ''robbing Swiss banks''. She justified by saying it was all probably Nazi gold anyway. The Slayers using their powers to rob banks didn't exactly endear them to the authorities.
* In one ''ComicBook/GIJoeARealAmericanHeroMarvel'' story, the Joes are tasked with hunting down an airplane a Nazi fugitive had to prevent COBRA from getting ahold of the potent nerve gas inside. To their surprise, they end up discovering a ''second'' plane filled with this. Turns out the fugitive didn't want to die for the ''Furher'', killed the crew and stole both and hid out in Argentina. Since they were also tasked with preventing an Israeli force from getting to him as part of their agreement, [[ExactWords they happily followed the agreement]]... [[LoopholeAbuse so that the fugitive's angry associates would get to him instead.]]
* In Creator/WarrenEllis' ''ComicBook/MinistryOfSpace'', it turns out the British space program was funded primarily from the assets of those who died in the Nazi concentration camps.
* In ''Uncanny ComicBook/XMen'' #161, it is revealed that Magneto stole a vast horde of Nazi gold from Baron Von Strucker that he later used to fund his militant activities. Considering his backstory (Magneto's entire family was murdered in Auschwitz, and he was used as slave labor to transport gas chamber victims to the ovens for disposal), one is tempted to say "good for him".
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* Subverted in the German comic ''ComicStrip/{{Rudi}}''. When they get lost in a cavern, they find two skeletons of Nazi soldiers and a huge box full of -- invalid old paper money.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film -- Live Action]]
* ''Film/AmericanRenegades'': In the films DistantPrologue the Nazis massacred the population of a Serbian village to hide $360,000,000 (in 1995 dollars) inside the church, only to be killed themselves when LaResistance blew up a local dam and drowned them before they could leave. The main plot of the story features a NATO peacekeeping team trying to retrieve the money.
* ''Film/ArmorOfGod II'' (''Operation Condor'' to Eaglelanders), starring Jackie Chan on a quest to uncover a lost Nazi stash.
* ''Film/BelowTheSea'' (1933) features a plot to retrieve [[UsefulNotes/ImperialGermany Imperial German]] gold lost during UsefulNotes/WorldWarI.
* The 2014 movie ''Film/BlackSea'' involves the attempt of a group of crooks to pull off a salvage mission of a long-lost U-Boat off the coast of Georgia, that was sunken early in World War Two that has two tons of gold in its cargo hold. Everything goes to hell for them almost from the word "go".
* The 1970s film ''Film/BrassTarget'' tells the (hypothetical) story of how a group of corrupt U.S. Army officers hired an assassin to kill UsefulNotes/GeorgeSPatton and make it look like an accident, to cover up their theft of a shipment of recovered Nazi gold.
* ''Film/CaboBlanco'' involves the search for the coordinates of a ship that was sunk carrying what is originally stated to be gold (in the hope of invoking GoldFever) but is revealed to be treasure looted by the Nazis from religious sites and the victims of concentration camps.
* In ''Film/DeadSnow'', a group of Norwegians find Nazi gold hidden beneath their cabin. [[spoiler: Unfortunately, the undead Nazis want it back.]]
* In ''Film/DeathShip'', the survivors get a good idea of what was done inside of the titular GhostShip when they find several big drawers full of gold teeth and gold fillings.
* ''Film/TheEqualizer2'': One of the side plots has [=McCall=] tracking down information for Sam Rubinstein, a Holocaust survivor who is trying to get back a family painting of his sister that was stolen by the Nazis and went through a succession of undocumented sales. [=McCall=] is able to find out that Rubinstein's sister actually survived the war and reunite them.
* Film/JamesBond wagers a captured bar of Nazi Gold in a golf game with ''Film/{{Goldfinger}}'', implying that he can supply more to the avaricious gold dealer.
* In ''Film/Hellboy2004'', Haupstein pays a guide to the site where Rasputin could be resurrected with a bar of gold stamped with a swastika, then kills him.
* The MacGuffin everyone is after (barring the daydreaming hero) in ''Film/HighStakes'' is a treasure chest of Nazi Gold.
-->'''Dorian:''' The Nazi crown jewels!
* In ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheLastCrusade'', [[TheQuisling Walter Donovan]] attempts to ply an Arab prince with a chest full of gold "donated by the finest families in all of Germany." (He's more interested in their CoolCar instead). A last minute edit removed the adjective "Jewish" from Donovan's description of said families.
* In ''Film/KellysHeroes'', A RagtagBunchOfMisfits attempt to steal a hoard of Nazi gold for themselves while UsefulNotes/WorldWarII is still raging. [[spoiler: They get away with it too.]]
* The plot of ''Film/MarathonMan'' revolves around the Nazi fugitive DepravedDentist Christian Szell trying to smuggle diamonds out of the country that he had bought from money acquired by selling tooth fillings of Jews.
* ''Film/TheMonumentsMen'' are charged with recovering Nazi art plunder during the latter stages of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII in Europe. Ironically for this trope they accidentally stumble across the entire German gold reserve hidden in a mine.
* The 1946 Creator/MarxBrothers film ''Film/ANightInCasablanca'' revolves around a load of Nazi loot. The pilot who'd been forced to fly the treasure out of France deliberately crashed his plane in Morocco and it wound up concealed in the hotel. A NaziNobleman hiding out in the city has been killing the hotel's managers in an effort to get himself appointed to the post so he could acquire the treasure and smuggle it to South America.
* Lampshaded in ''Film/{{Outpost}}''. When the mercenaries discover a large swastika painted on the wall of an abandoned bunker, their first thought is that their mysterious employer is seeking Nazi gold. He just smirks.
* In ''Film/Postal2007'', [[AsHimself Uwe Boll]] casually mentions in an interview that his movies are funded with Nazi gold. His reasoning: ''"Hey, '''someone's''' got to spend it!"''
* The final [=MacGuffin=] of ''Film/RedNotice'' was stolen by the Nazis in WWII, and eventually ended up in a hidden treasure stash in [[ArgentinaIsNaziland South America]].
* ''Film/ThreeKings'' uses the ''Kelly's Heroes'' idea, but applies it to UsefulNotes/SaddamHussein and gold stolen from the Sheiks of Kuwait, invaded by Iraq months prior.
* The plot of ''Film/TheTrain'' involves the efforts of a French Resistance cell to prevent a collection of art stolen by a WickedCultured German general from becoming this.
* In ''Film/XMenFirstClass'', Erik lays his hands on some Nazi gold and even trolls a Swiss bank manager with it.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* In Creator/AlistairMacLean's ''Bear Island'', a film crew is sailing to a remote arctic island. Eventually, it turns out that [[spoiler: the film is a ruse, as the producers are in fact after a lost U-boat containing Nazi gold.]]
* Inverted in ''The Commissar'' by Creator/SvenHassel which involves Nazis (or at least our German anti-heroes) stealing Soviet gold from behind their lines.
* In ''Literature/{{Cryptonomicon}}'', the modern heroes search for [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamashita%27s_gold Yamashita's gold]], more or less the Far East equivalent of this trope. A smaller cache transferred from the Nazis to their Japanese allies also figures in the plot.
** The gold recovered from the sunken German submarine also turns out to be the Solomonic gold that much of the plot of ''Literature/TheBaroqueCycle'' revolved around.
* A futuristic variant occurs in ''Literature/CaptainVorpatrilsAlliance'' where a massive cache of Cetagandan plunder is found on a planet they'd previously invaded and occupied, ranging from precious metals to valuable antiques to priceless historical artifacts.
* ''Literature/DirkPittAdventures''
** In ''Dragon'', Dirk helps uncover a stash of various Nazi treasures. As a reward for his help in uncovering the stash (And disabling a lethal booby trap), the German officer in charge of the excavation lets him keep one of the Me-262 fighter jets stored there.
** Another ''Dirk Pitt'' novel, ''Sahara'', has a plot that centres around Confederate gold. Its movie adaptation is much the same.
* ''Literature/JamesBond''
** In the short story "[[Literature/OctopussyAndTheLivingDaylights Octopussy]]", Bond is assigned to apprehend a hero of the Second World War implicated in a murder involving a cache of Nazi gold. Agent 007 appears briefly in this story, which is told mostly in flashback and from the point of view of Major Dexter Smythe, the villain.
*** This story is briefly mentioned in [[Film/{{Octopussy}} the film version]], with the title character being Smythe's daughter.
** In ''Literature/TheFactsOfDeath'', the father of Alfred Hutchinson was suspected of "mislaying" Nazi gold during the end of WWII. These suspicions are confirmed true when it is revealed that Alfred used the goods, with help of a criminal organization, to fund his political career.
* In ''Literature/ModernVillainess'', there's an alleged case of Imperial Russian Gold. Runa is of (extremely collateral) Romanov blood, and when her connection to the Moonlight Fund and its SwissBankAccount is discovered, the government of Russia starts snooping around to see if it was being used to launder treasure that had gone missing in [[UsefulNotes/RedOctober 1917]].
* ''Literature/StarterVillain2023'': Charlie is told that Jake hid a large stash of valuables looted in WWII-era Europe and kept for decades by the Lombardy Convocation. After Dobrev is apparently killed; Charlie makes a deal to buy off the rest of the Lombardy Convocation's current members with it. But [[spoiler:there is no stash, only empty crates. It was a set-up by Dobrev and Jake to get the Convocation's members to kill each other]].
* In one of the ''Soldiers of Barrabas'' pulp novels, the SOBS are eager to get their hands on some Nazi gold until they discover it's crates filled with gold teeth from the concentration camps.
* ''The Substance of Martyrs'', by William Sambrot, collected in Alfred Hitchcock's anthology ''Stories Not for the Nervous'', involved an investigator trying to track down a gold crucifix stolen from a small town by an infamous Nazi officer, only to find upon capturing the man that it had apparently already been melted down into ingots. After the crucifix is reforged, and a miracle occurs upon it being touched, the investigator confides to the narrator that [[spoiler:he found the original crucifix, which was actually made out of lead with gold paint, and the gold bars almost certainly came from gold stolen from Jews sent to the gas chambers]].
* The Joseph Finder novel ''Vanished'' features the Iraq war money (see Real Life below).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* As part of a bizarre fake infomercial on Creator/AdultSwim, there's an ad for a mom-and-pop store that specializes in exchanging Nazi gold for money.
* One of the many, many, many {{MacGuffin}}s in ''Series/AlloAllo'' were some Nazi gold bars, which were being stolen by [[GambitPileup three different Nazi groups, a cafe owner and his waitress, and two different resistance groups]]. Along with some paintings and various other bits and pieces.
* In Season 3 of ''Series/Daredevil2015'', [[BigBad Wilson Fisk]] is determined to get back the painting "Rabbit in a Snowstorm" which was confiscated by the FBI on his arrest. He finds it's been returned to an elderly woman who explains that it was stolen by the Gestapo, who then send her family to a concentration camp. Despite knowing what kind of man Fisk is, she has no intention of returning it. [[EvenEvilHasStandards Fisk promises to give up his quest for the painting]], but unfortunately an underling who's eager for Fisk's approval takes it anyway and, it's implied, kills the owner in the process.
* A variant occurs in ''Series/ItsAlwaysSunnyInPhiladelphia'' where rather than trying to pawn off valuables stolen by the Nazis, the Gang manages to get ahold of artifacts that originally belonged to them that ''became'' worthwhile due to historic value. Mac & Dennis try to sell equipment that once belonged to Dennis & Dee's SS grandfather to a local museum, but the curator happens to be Jewish and [[HonorBeforeReason takes offense, reporting them to the police]] assuming (correctly) that they obtained it illegally. [[PricelessMingVase They then burn the evidence behind the bar.]] In a later episode they manage to get ahold of a painting made by Hitler himself, which ''again'' is burned.
* An episode of ''Series/AuctionKings'' had someone try to auction off a Nazi handbook his father got from the war. In this case, however, there ''was'' a buyer.
* In March 2008, ''Series/TheColbertReport'' [[http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/162604/march-03-2008/das-booty---hitler-s-gold-pt--1 picked]] [[http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/164124/march-18-2008/das-booty---hitler-s-gold-pt--2 up]] a story about Nazi gold possibly being buried in a small town in Germany. It quickly turned into a parody of ''Franchise/IndianaJones''/''Literature/TheDaVinciCode''/''Film/NationalTreasure''-type plots ([[TheyCalledMeMad "Oh, they laughed at me at the academy!"]]), culminating with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, armed with a basketball, being sent to wrest the treasure from the hands of the Germans. ItMakesSenseInContext. No it doesn't.
--> '''Stephen:''' ''[breaking character after looking at the caption that identifies him as "Stephen Colbert, Nazi Treasure-Hunter"]'' That actually... I think the hyphen is in the wrong place there... [[AmbiguousSyntax this makes me seem like a Nazi who is hunting treasure, as opposed to someone who is hunting Nazi treasure]]. It's a small but significant difference.
* A plot point in season 2 of ''Series/{{Detectorists}}''. When suspicions are raised about the motives of a German visitor in wanting to excavate the site of a crashed WWII German aeroplane, a [[TheVoiceless normally silent]] member of the metal detecting club suggests that he might be searching for Nazi gold smuggled out of Germany by the Luftwaffe. This is dismissed by the other members on the grounds that surely ''everyone'' knows it's a myth. But she's right - there's no gold at the crash site, but that ''is'' what the visitor is looking for. It turns out that he's got a criminal record in Germany for disturbing war graves in his quest.
* An episode of ''Series/FoylesWar'' has a family of British Nazi sympathizers and some smuggled Nazi Gold. The man had been protected from prosecution for his secret business deal with Nazis, but the discovery of a gold box given to him as a gift destroys it. Foyle investigates the box itself and discovers it was the holder for a prayer-book, which was stolen from a murdered Jewish family.
* Guy Secretan of ''Series/GreenWing'' is Swiss, and is often insulted for his heritage, including references to Nazi gold. One hurricane of stereotypes runs:
--> '''Guy:''' "Shut your eyes, think of Switzerland -- what do you see?"\\
''[...]''\\
'''Mac:''' I see a chocolate Phil Collins coming out of a clock every hour, to tidy up his Nazi gold."
* Defied in one episode of ''Series/HogansHeroes'', when the eponymous group is on a mission to intercept a shipment of gold from the Banque de France, which the Nazis robbed. [[spoiler:They get it by swapping it with gilded bricks and using the gold (disguised to look like bricks) to fix Colonel Klink's patio, to keep it safe until the end of the war.]]
* An episode of ''Series/KamenRider'' saw [[NebulousEvilOrganisation Shocker]] searching for Hitler's treasure. [[spoiler:Kamen Rider gets to it first, and stages [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPdDdkViQrM quite the ambush]] for them.]]
* The VillainProtagonist of ''Series/{{Kessler}}'' (a spin-off of ''Series/SecretArmy'') has access to a SwissBankAccount containing wealth looted from occupied Europe during [=WW2=]. Considerable dramatic tension is made of what Kessler might do with these funds -- use them to live comfortably in exile, or fund a neo-Nazi resurgence?
* ''Series/{{Leverage}}'' featured the Iraq war money in "The Homecoming Job." It was originally believed that it was a simple coverup of a shooting gone wrong but it was later shown to be this.
** "The Two Live Crew Job" has the Leverage crew stealing a Gustav Klimt painting for their clients, whose family had it stolen by the Nazis in WWII. This is complicated by another crew of thieves who just want to steal the painting for money.
** And "The Van Gogh Job" has the team finding a lost Van Gogh that was stolen in WWII, then found and smuggled to the United States by an American soldier. The backstory is done as a WholeEpisodeFlashback.
* The ''Series/MacGyver1985'' episode "The Ten Percent Solution" had the Phoenix Foundation's attempting to auction a painting only to be interrupted by a Holocaust survivor who claims the painting was stolen from his family by the Nazis. The subsequent suspicious attempted silencing of said survivor leads Mac to discover a massive neo-Nazi conspiracy that infiltrated the entire West Coast of the US.
* ''Series/TheMandalorian'': Sci-fi variant. A small cell of the Imperial Remnant has almost nothing; they've been reduced to hiding in a small warehouse in the slums, and their once pristine white Stormtrooper armor [[ScarredEquipment is dirty and scarred]]. They do, however, have a large cache of beskar steel, an extremely rare and valuable metal that the Empire stole from the Mandalorians in the Great Purge. They are therefore able to hire quite a few bounty hunters, including the title Mandalorian. Mandalorians are too pragmatic to turn down such a lucrative job, but his tribe is not happy that he is working for the Empire that slaughtered their people and stole their treasures. Just to drive the comparison, each beskar ingot is even [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/starwars/images/b/bc/Beskar_brick.png/revision/latest?cb=20191113075313 stamped]] with the Imperial logo.
* A season one episode of ''Series/MissionImpossible'' had Rollin infiltrate a Neo-Nazi band in order to track down a massive cache of this before they did.
** This episode was reworked in the an episode of the 1988 revival called "The Legacy". Here the people attempting to retrieve the gold were the grandsons of Nazi officers, rather than the sons.
* The Iraq War reconstruction money was featured in ''{{Series/Nikita}}'' in which Division stole it and framed the military investigator that went looking for it.
* ''Series/{{Numb3rs}}'' had an episode where an painting was stolen from an museum. An old Jewish women who grew up in Berlin said it belonged on her home wall and it has been a court case when the episode starts. Both her son and the owner of the painting is accused of owning it, in the end it is [[spoiler: the museum curator that found out it is a fake. The original is found to be sitting in a gallery in Budapest]].
* An episode of ''Series/PawnStars'' had one seller come in trying to sell off some silver pieces his grandfather got from a Nazi stronghold during World War II; not surprisingly, the pawn shop didn't take them.
* Not gold, but the comedy ''Series/PrivateSchulz'' had the protagonists seeking the forged British bank notes which had been dumped in a lake in Austria. Like every other plan of the title character to get his hands on them, it fails.
* ''Series/UnsolvedMysteries'' profiled a few of these cases. Among them are:
** Yamashita's treasure was a stash of gold bars, jewels and a golden Buddha found by amateur treasure hunters in the Phillipines in 1971; these had been left behind by General Tomoyuki Yamashita during the Second World War. The entire treasure was confiscated by UsefulNotes/FerdinandMarcos, who had one of the finders brutally tortured until he revealed its location. The Buddha has never been found since the end of Marcos' reign. More details can be read [[https://unsolvedmysteries.fandom.com/wiki/Yamashita%27s_Treasure here]].
** [[https://unsolvedmysteries.fandom.com/wiki/Lunersee_Lake_Treasure The Lunersee Lake Treasure]] is believed to be a cache of gold hidden by Nazis in a lake in Brand, Austria. It too has never been found.
* A peculiar example comes from ''Series/WhiteCollar'' in the form of an amber-covered music box supposedly taken from the Amber Room. This music box has become the backbone of the show's developing MythArc.
** The music box is one of the clues that eventually leads to [[spoiler:a sunken Nazi submarine filled with Nazi treasure and stolen art]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Radio]]
* ''That Mitchell and Webb Sound'' (the Radio version of ''Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook'') featured a sketch with a Swiss radio program about the History of Switzerland. The particular episode was "The Years 1939 to 1945: The Gold Rush".
-->'''Old Swiss Man''': My brother ze bank manager came to me and said he had run out of room in his bank vault for all of ze gold. And so I hit upon an idea. I decided to move my entire family up into our attic so that we could fill ze rest of ze house with Fascist Treasure.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Stand-Up Comedy]]
* In an anecdote during his ''Tinselworm'' show, Music/BillBailey explains how at one gig he was told not to swear or [[TemptingFate mention Nazi gold]]. Bill chose to begin the gig by descending from the ceiling on a giant golden swastika, singing "Nah-nah-nah-Nazi Gold/Nazi Gold/Gold, gold/always believe in your soul/[[CrossesTheLineTwice you're indestructible - like the Third Reich!]]" Eventually, it was revealed that the gig was sponsored by a Swiss bank directly implicated in the laundering of Nazi gold during World War II and apparently their support of the Nazis helped prolong the war by at least two years. Bill then called upon the audience members to pay a visit to their local branch of the bank and ask to open an account with...
-->[[LargeHam NNNNNNNNAZI GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOLD!]] [[TakeThat JUST LIKE]] ''[[TakeThat YOU]]'' [[TakeThat DID!]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''VideoGame/DeusEx'' featured the [[UsefulNotes/TheKnightsTemplar Templar Gold]] which had been hidden from the Nazis.
* ''VideoGame/MedalOfHonorRisingSun'' has Yamashita's gold, gold looted from Southeast Asia by the Japanese Army general of the same name, which becomes the MacGuffin of the second half of the game. The game's BigBad, Commander Shima, hopes to use the stolen treasure as a trump card into helping overthrow the German and Soviet governments through the help of bribed accomplices.
* In ''VideoGame/TheSaboteur'' Nazi Gold is one of the items found in a crate of contraband.
* ''VideoGame/SniperEliteV2'' has 100 bars of Nazi gold scattered around Berlin as a [[CollectionSidequest collectible for the player to find]].
* ''VideoGame/UnchartedDrakesFortune'' sees the hero on the trail of El Dorado -- and following in the footsteps of the Nazis who got there first.
* Used to varying degrees in the ''VideoGame/{{Wolfenstein}}'' games:
** ''VideoGame/Wolfenstein3D'' allowed the player to collect oodles of gold trinkets to gain points; if they got enough gold, they got an extra life bonus.
** ''VideoGame/ReturnToCastleWolfenstein''included collectible gold and other precious things (including some bottles of Saint-Émilion 1938, a great Bordeaux wine) as a nod to its predecessor, but here it was primarily used as an EasterEgg and gave no benefit to the player.
** ''VideoGame/Wolfenstein2009'' uses it as currency; exploring levels lets you find gold bars which you can take to the black market to upgrade your weapons.
** In ''VideoGame/WolfensteinTheNewOrder'' and [[VideoGame/WolfensteinTheOldBlood its]] [[VideoGame/WolfensteinIITheNewColossus sequels]], gold trophies (which are not just ''Nazi'' Gold, but also [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot pre-civilisation Jewish gold like a small robot]], and even a small gold meteorite) serve as collectibles needed for OneHundredPercentCompletion.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Visual Novels]]
* ''VisualNovel/UminekoWhenTheyCry'': Episode 7, ''Requiem of the Golden Witch'', reveals that Kinzo's ten tons of hidden gold is[[spoiler:, while not quite Nazi gold, gold that belonged to the Italian Social Republic[[note]]which was basically a Nazi puppet state[[/note]] that was smuggled by U-boat out of Italy before it fell. The impression on the gold bars is not actually the Ushiromiya one-winged eagle crest, but a partially faded imprint of the ISR eagle that Kinzo later adopted as the family symbol]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* The ''Literature/ChaosTimeline'' has ''fascist'' gold, which is discovered by Red Pirates who decide to take off for Braseal (sic) instead of giving it back.
* In one episode of ''WebVideo/FreemansMind'', Gordon Freeman speculates that there's Nazi Gold hidden somewhere in Black Mesa. "Ziegen Sie Mir das Geld!"[[note]]A [[GratuitousGerman misspelled]] "[[Film/JerryMaguire Show me the money!]]"[[/note]]
* LetsPlay/{{slowbeef}} of ''WebVideo/{{Retsupurae}}'' speculates that this is how the company that made ''Series/GamingInTheClintonYears'' was funded.
* One ''Website/RPCAuthority'' log concerns [[http://rpcauthority.wikidot.com/rpc-126 RPC-126]], "The Root Of All Evil", which is a set of cursed Reichsbank gold bars that induce GoldFever in [[BrownNote any living thing that sees them]]. The victims obsessively clutch the bars to themselves, [[DeathByMaterialism as they meld with their flesh]] and [[VampiricDraining slowly drain their life force]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce'' has Carl purchase a storage unit, hoping to find something valuable to sell, including Nazi gold.
-->'''Carl''': If you see anything with a swastika on it, tell me. I know a guy.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': Subverted in the episode "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS7E22 Raging Abe Simpson and His Grumbling Grandson in 'The Curse of the Flying Hellfish']]"; when Abe finally unlocks his stash of priceless Nazi paintings, he is immediately stopped by State Department agents who confiscate and return them to their rightful owner, a spoiled and obnoxious German {{yuppie}}, for diplomatic purposes.
-->'''Agent:''' Baron von Wortzenberger, on behalf of the American people, I apologize for --\\
'''Baron:''' Ja ja ja, mach schnell mit der art things, huh? I must get back to Dancecentrum in Stuttgart in time to see Music/{{Kraftwerk}}. ''[they begin loading paintings into his car]'' ...Hey, watch out for the CD-changer in mein trunk! Idiot.
* ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManAndHisAmazingFriends'': the BannedEpisode "Quest of the Red Skull" revolves around the Red Skull attempting to find a cache of Nazi wealth... along with a wealth of experimental super weapons. With these resources, he intends to become a new Adolf Hitler and wage another World War.
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[[folder:Real Life]]
* On the subject of not giving Nazi Gold to its rightful owners, Swiss banks held onto their stashes for quite some time, albeit on the somewhat reasonable grounds that it was extremely difficult to prove exactly who the rightful owners were. When they finally did return the gold to the estates of the claimants, it was considered 'too little, too late'.
** Immediately after the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, a lot of new-looking Swiss gold coins with dates from late 1930s stamped on them appeared in circulation. There was much suspicion that the coins were product of the Swiss government attempting to launder the ill-gotten Nazi gold in their (or their banks') vaults.
* On the other side of the Axis, Imperial Japan too was known to have looted quite a bit from much of Eastern and Southeast Asia (this includes the priceless paleontological fossil artifact "The Peking Man", as well as the prized [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamashita%27s_gold Yamashita's gold]]) and there are occasional stories of finding hidden caches of Imperial Gold. This was the basis for part of the plot in ''Literature/{{Cryptonomicon}}''.
** Better yet are the missing Swords. So at the end of World War 2, after the Japanese surrendered, all arms had to be turned in, this was interpreted to include swords, and cultural treasures were not spared. American servicemen tended to look for souvenirs and grab the nicest swords they could, despite [[UsefulNotes/DouglasMacArthur General MacArthur's]] occupation authority attempting to preserve the most culturally and artistically significant swords. Swords worth millions are still lost, many probably in the attics of the sons and daughters of servicemen who don't know the difference between a truly priceless sword and a run of the mill one. Honjo Masamune is the equivalent of the Mona Lisa of swords and still missing.
* A massive hoard of Nazi treasure, including the majority, if not all of, the gold and currency reserves of the Reichsbank as well as looted works of art and more grimly looted items such as gold teeth, eyeglasses and personal effects of Holocaust victims, were discovered in a salt mine in Merkers-Kieselback in the center of Germany. ''Monuments Men'' gives the idea that Generals Eisenhower, Patton and Montgomery were short-sighted and boorish for posing with the gold bars rather than with Art/TheGhentAltarpiece. However, for all the vast importance of the art to world culture, getting the fact that the Allies had essentially seized Germany's checkbook disseminated to the wider world was more important to winning the war. With no hard currency, the few remaining creditors still willing to support Germany pulled out, turning a grim situation for the Third Reich into a utterly hopeless one.
* Russia goes through upheavals very regularly, and every time a lot of gold belonging to a dead regime allegedly vanishes into nowhere. The two latest examples are Admiral Kolchak's Gold (actually the Russian Imperial gold), and the Soviet "Gold of the Party". Both are memetic treasures with unknown whereabouts.
* Tremendous stashes of gold from fallen regimes are hardly limited to those countries. The US has [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confederate_gold Confederate gold]], Scotland has [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loch_Arkaig_treasure a huge disappeared donation]] towards the Jacobite Uprising, and the Inca Empire has the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treasure_of_the_Llanganatis Treasure of the Llanganatis]].
* There are still expeditions launched every other year to find the Nazi Gold supposedly hidden in Lake Toplitz in the Austrian alps. A reference to this myth is made in ''Film/{{Goldfinger}}''. There is a good reason for this. In the 1950s divers discovered over 100 million UK Pounds of face value Five Pound notes in the lake. These bills were intended to be circulated in the UK in an attempt to destabilize the British financial system. When it became obvious that the war was lost, the counterfeit notes were dumped in an attempt to hide the entire scheme's existence. While that particular design of Five Pound note has long since been removed from circulation, the surviving Nazi counterfeit notes are now collectors' items. And legal to own specifically because the design is out of circulation.
* A more recent variation involves stolen US cash after the 2003 Iraq War. The US government sent 12 billion dollars into Iraq and 6.6 billion of that went missing. Due to the fact that it was needed urgently, the money had no controls and was simply thrown around. A similar play was done in Afghanistan but with smaller amounts. In that case CIA agents were parachuted into the country with millions of dollars in cash strapped to them.
* A German metal detector operator in southern Hamburg found [[http://www.thelocal.de/20150715/amateur-archaeologist-finds-nazi-gold-hoard a cache of about 200 Nazi gold coins]] in a burial mound in July 2015 that ended up appraised at €45,000 and pocketed a nice €2,500 as his finder's fee.
* The [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Republic_(1853)#Wreck S.S. Republic]] sunk on October 25, 1865, loaded with gold and silver coins for use as hard currency to bolster the reformed United States's economy following the end of the Civil War a few months prior. This is an example of a lost hoard which ''was'' successfully found; after being located in 2003, a salvage operation recovered most of the coins, which are now quite desired by numismatic collectors.
* In August 2015, Polish officials [[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3214265/Nazi-gold-train-Deathbed-confession-leads-treasure-hunters-secret-location-Polish-officials-claim-seen-proof-radar.html?ito=embedded confirmed]] the existence of a [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot Nazi gold]] ''[[CoolTrain train]]'' near the town of Walbrzych, allegedly detected by a ground-penetrating radar, containing weapons, jewellery, artwork and archive documents. They also warn that the train could be mined and ridden with hazardous materials, in order to deter [[AdventurerArchaeologist treasure hunters]]. The original finders were two treasure hunters, a German and a Pole, who tipped off the government after they had gotten an alleged DeathbedConfession from a man who claimed to be one of the people who helped hide away the train in 1945. Prior to this, the train had been nothing more than the subject of rumors and UrbanLegends in Poland. Unfortunately, excavations revealed nothing, and the radar results were said to have been due to underground ice deposits.
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