What Was Found In The Staffordshire Hoard?

The Staffordshire Hoard is the largest hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver metalwork yet found. It consists of almost 4,600 items and metal fragments, amounting to a total of 5.1 kg (11 lb) of gold, 1.4 kg (3 lb) of silver and some 3,500 pieces of garnet cloisonné jewellery.

What was unusual about the Staffordshire Hoard?

The Staffordshire Hoard is unique in that it is almost entirely made up of war gear, especially sword fittings. Over 1,000 pieces are from a single, ornate helmet. It is the grandest example to have been found from the period and would have been fit for a king.

How much did the man who found the Staffordshire Hoard get?

£3.2m
A farmer who shared a £3.2m windfall after the Staffordshire Hoard was discovered in his field has said the money has not changed him. Fred Johnson still lives on the farm where the biggest ever haul of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver was discovered 10 years ago by a metal detectorist.

What did Terry Herbert find?

But for Terry Herbert, an unemployed man from Staffordshire the dream has become a reality. Using his 14 year old metal detector on a friend’s freshly ploughed field in Staffordshire, he stumbled across the largest single find of Anglo-Saxon gold in history.

How were the Staffordshire Hoard items made?

The hoard contains thousands of tiny garnets, cut and ground into flat slices which were shaped to fit into gold cellwork. This style of decoration is found all over Europe from the 5th century AD.

What is the largest treasure ever found in the British Isles?

The Staffordshire Hoard is the largest hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver metalwork yet found. It consists of almost 4,600 items and metal fragments, amounting to a total of 5.1 kg (11 lb) of gold, 1.4 kg (3 lb) of silver and some 3,500 pieces of garnet cloisonné jewellery.

What happened to the Staffordshire Hoard after it was found?

All of the Staffordshire Hoard Treasure finds from 2009 and 2012 are now owned jointly by Birmingham and Stoke-on-Trent City Councils on behalf of the nation, and cared for by Birmingham Museums Trust and the Potteries Museum & Art Gallery, Stoke-on-Trent.

When was the Staffordshire Hoard buried?

The majority of the Staffordshire Hoard treasure was crafted between the mid-sixth and mid-seventh centuries AD and buried between 650-675 AD. It is the largest collection of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver ever discovered.

Who found the lemminkäinen hoard?

Excavation of the Temple of Lemminkäinen
In 1987, Ior Bock and his supporters began fund-raising in order to finance excavation of a sediment-filled cave that is situated under the hill ‘Sibbosberg’, situated north of Gumbostrand in Sipoo, 30 km east of Helsinki – at the estate Bock had inherited from his parents.

How much was the jersey hoard worth?

Background: provided by the Receiver General
The total consideration paid by the Government to the Crown for the purchase of the Hoard is £4,250,000. This includes an amount of £250,000 paid to Jersey Heritage to disaggregate the Hoard, which was necessary to establish all the components that comprise it.

How much money did Terry Herbert get?

Terry Herbert, 56, unearthed the Staffordshire Hoard in July 2009, using a metal detector bought at a car boot sale for £2.50. He found it on farmer Fred Johnson’s land at Brownhills in the West Midlands. The £3.28million find transformed the men’s lives after they shared the reward equally.

Who owns the Staffordshire Hoard?

There are more than 600 significant objects found in 4600 fragments of mainly war gear, which combine to a total of nearly 4 kilos of gold, 1.7 kilos of silver and thousands of cloisonné garnets. The greatest mystery of the Hoard remains unsolved as it is unknown who owned and assembled this extraordinary treasure.

What metal detector found the Staffordshire Hoard?

The Hoard was found by metal detectorist Herbert in a farmer’s field near Hammerwich, Staffordshire in 2009 and is Britain’s largest ever treasure case.

What does the Staffordshire Hoard reveal about Anglo-Saxon culture?

New analysis, examining the gold content of over 100 pieces from the hoard, as well as other Anglo-Saxon objects, has revealed that Early Medieval craftsmen were using complicated chemical techniques to enrich the outer surface of golden objects, transforming their appearance to that of items made from much purer metal

Why were Anglo-Saxons buried with their possessions?

The ship was full of gold and silver, jewellery and weapons, bowls and cups. In Anglo-Saxon times these sorts of things were often buried with people when they died – perhaps because the Anglo-Saxons thought the dead person would need them on their journey to another life, or when he got there.

When was the Sutton Hoo sword found?

What is the Staffordshire Hoard? The Staffordshire Hoard is the largest hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver ever found and of a quality rarely seen when it was unearthed by a metal detectorist in a farmer’s field in 2009. It joined the Sutton Hoo Great Ship Burial as one of the greatest Anglo-Saxon finds ever made.

Was there any Argyll treasure?

The Tobermory Treasure Hunt
This gold is a treasure contained in the remains of a Spanish galleon sunk in 1588 by members of the Clan MacLean. The wreck and its treasure were granted to the Duke of Argyll and his descendants. Over the years many attempts have been made to find the treasure.

What is the most valuable treasure that has not been found?

Ark of the Covenant. Honjo Masamune sword. Lost Library of the Moscow Tsars. Crown jewels of Ireland.

Can I keep treasure I find in England?

You only need to report items officially defined as treasure. There’s an unlimited fine or up to 3 months in prison for not reporting treasure. You can get help reporting treasure to your local coroner in Wales by contacting the curators at the Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales.

When did Mercia disappear?

Mercia

Kingdom of Mercia Old English: Miercna rīċe Latin: Merciorum regnum
Legislature Witenagemot
Historical era Heptarchy
• Established 527
Disestablished 918

When did Mercia cease to exist?

The Kingdom of Mercia (c. 527-879 CE) was an Anglo-Saxon political entity located in the midlands of present-day Britain and bordered on the south by the Kingdom of Wessex, on the west by Wales, north by Northumbria, and on the east by East Anglia.