Canterbury-St Martin's hoard

Coordinates: 51°16′41″N 1°05′16″E / 51.277991°N 1.087748°E / 51.277991; 1.087748
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

51°16′41″N 1°05′16″E / 51.277991°N 1.087748°E / 51.277991; 1.087748

Canterbury-St Martin's hoard
Replicas of coin-pendants from the hoard, in the British Museum
MaterialGold coins and jewellery
Sizeat least 9 items
Created4th through 6th centuries AD
Discovered1840s
Present locationmostly World Museum, Liverpool

The Canterbury-St Martin's hoard is a

Bibliotheque Nationale
.

Discovery and publication

The hoard was found some time before 25 April 1844, when some of the items from the find were first discussed at a meeting of the Royal Numismatic Society by Charles Roach Smith. All that Smith knew of the date when they were found was that it was "a few years since", as he wrote in 1844. The location of the hoard is usually given as the churchyard of St Martin's Church in Canterbury.[1] However, the first publication about the find, by Smith, states that the find was on the "grounds of the monastery of St Augustine".[2] The objects were acquired by W. H. Rolfe, a resident of Sandwich, Kent, in two stages, a first acquisition of three items acquired before April 1844, and five more items procured soon after September 1844.[1]

The first three items were first published in 1844 in

Numismatic Chronicle in 1845.[1]

The items in the hoard have been examined by x-ray and fluorescent. The author of this study, S. C. Hawkes, argues that the eight items in the hoard were found in different graves. However, the historian Philip Grierson felt that the possibility of two graves from different time periods both containing coins of the same period was so small as to make the likelihood of the hoard coming from two graves slim.[3]

The hoard is the only late-6th- or early-7th-century find of gold jewellery in a grave in a churchyard.

Anglo-Saxon coin.[5]

Contents

Replicas of the Liudhard medalet

The known objects in the hoard are eight items:[1]

The first three items listed were the original items acquired by Rolfe, with the others being acquired later.[1]

Besides these eight items, it appears likely that at least one other item originally was found with the above items:[6]

  • A coin with an inscription of
    Bibliotheque Nationale[6]

There may have been other items that were found with the hoard, but their identification is not possible.[6]

Ownership and current location

Besides the Oloron coin, which is at the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris, the other eight items are at the

World Museum Liverpool.[7] From Rolfe, the eight items were acquired by Joseph Mayer, who gave them to the City Museums of Liverpool, which became the World Museum later.[8]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Grierson "Canterbury (St Martin's) Hoard" Dark Age Numismatics p. 39
  2. ^ Quoted in Adby and Wiliams "A Catalogue of Hoards" Coinage and History pp. 15–16
  3. ^ Grierson "Canterbury Hoard" Dark Age Numismatics Corregida p. 5
  4. ^ Blair Church in Anglo-Saxon Society p. 61
  5. ^ Gaimster "Scandinavian Gold Bracteates" Medieval Archaeology p. 7
  6. ^ a b c Grierson "Canterbury (St Martin's) Hoard" Dark Age Numismatics pp. 39–40
  7. ^ Werner "Liudhard medalet" Anglo-Saxon England 20 pp. 27–28
  8. ^ Staff "British Antiquities" World Museum Liverpool

References

  • Adby, Richard; Williams, Gareth (2006). "A Catalogue of Hoards and Single Finds from the British Isles c. AD 410–675". In Cook, Barrie; Williams, Gareth (eds.). Coinage and History in the North Sea World, c. AD 500–1250. Leiden: Brill. pp. 11–74. .
  • Blair, John P. (2005). The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. .
  • Gaimster, Märit (1992). "Scandinavian Gold Bracteates: Britain. Money and Media in the Dark Ages" (pdf). Medieval Archaeology. 36. Retrieved 30 January 2010.
  • .
  • Staff (2009). "British Antiquities". World Museum Liverpool. Retrieved 30 January 2010.
  • Werner, Martin (1992). "The Liudhard Medalet". In .