Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Viking Treasure Found in UK

cookie

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,927
Location
Sydney Australia
Viking find could net pair £500,000
By Nigel Reynolds Arts Correspondent
Last Updated: 12:01am BST 20/07/2007



Two amateur treasure hunters are in line for a pay-out of up to £500,000 after a small pot they found buried in a field turned out to contain the most important hoard of Viking silver and gold found in this country for 150 years.


The silver pot that contained the Viking hoard


Packed inside the ornately carved 8th century silver gilt pot, experts at the British Museum found 617 coins, jewellery and ingots from as far afield as Samarkand, Afghanistan, Russia, France, and Ireland. The pot had been buried in a field near Harrogate in Yorkshire, probably in the year 927.

"This really is the world in a vessel," said Jonathan Williams, the keeper of European pre-history at the British Museum, where the treasure was put on display yesterday. "It is a quite incredible find and a very special moment for us at the museum."

The discovery was made in January - but kept secret until yesterday - by father and son David and Andrew Whelan, from Leeds. They had spent hundreds of hours over the past three years scouring local fields with metal detectors without finding anything of value.

After the North Yorkshire coroner yesterday declared the find to be treasure - entitling the Whelans to half its value and the farmer on whose land it was discovered to the other half - David Whelan, 51, described his moment of triumph as "a thing of dreams".

advertisementOnce cleaned, the pot was found to be silver gilt, possibly an ecclesiastical vessel plundered from northern France. It is carved with vines, leaves and six hunting scenes showing lions, stags and a horse.

The value of the hoard is to be determined by an independent tribunal, but yesterday it was conservatively put at £750,000, although some suggested that it might be worth more than £1 million.

To David Whelan, the value matters little. He said: "We don't need owt. We've got all we want. If we had found one coin we would have been over the moon."
 

Story

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,056
Location
Home
and in related news...

Woman Gardening Finds Rare Penny
AP

BURNHAM, Pa. (AP) - August 1, 2007 - A penny saved is a penny earned, but a 1793 cent found in the garden is probably worth a lot more to a Mifflin County woman.

Cheryl Corbin first thought she had picked up a quarter while planting flowers in June, then saw the date and thought it was a bicentennial coin. At work the next day, Corbin said, "I had the office in an uproar."

Co-workers searched the Internet and identified the coin as a 1793 copper "chain" cent. The front featured Lady Liberty and the back had a circle of 15 chain links representing the 15 states in the union at that time.

Though Corbin's coin was heavily corroded, she said a specialist told her it still could be worth $1,500 to $3,000.

David Wilson, owner of 4 Star Coins and Jewelry in Burnham, said he had sold a chain cent that was in mint condition for $22,000, but if Corbin's was heavily corroded it may only be worth a few hundred dollars.

Corbin said her coin is at Stacks Rare Coins in New York City, soaking in oil to try to remove some of the corrosion, and is scheduled to be featured in a September auction.
 

Alan Eardley

One Too Many
Messages
1,500
Location
Midlands, UK
Baron Kurtz said:
That's cool. I wonder if the crown will claim it. It really should go to the British Museum.

I remember when i was a kid they found a hoard of coin in a field near my town that had been stolen in the 1300s somtime. The crown got all of that.

bk

Yes, technically it is 'treasure trove'.

Alan
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,996
Messages
3,091,698
Members
54,675
Latest member
wooosie
Top