Hoard of 5,000 Anglo Saxon Coins Worth Over $1.5 M Discovered by Amateur Metal Detectorists

Amateur treasure hunters struck it rich when they unearthed a massive hoard of more than 5,000 silver coins during a Christmas gathering on farmland near Lenborough in Buckinghamshire, England. The coins date back more than 1,000 years and are believed to be worth more than 1 million pounds ($1.5 million).
Hoard of 5,000 Anglo Saxon Coins Worth Over $1.5 M Discovered by Amateur Metal Detectorists
Small cross type penny with portrait of King Ethelred, similar to the ones recently discovered near Lenborough, England. Wikimedia Commons
Updated:

Amateur treasure hunters struck it rich when they unearthed a massive hoard of more than  5,000 silver coins during a Christmas gathering on farmland near Lenborough in Buckinghamshire, England. The coins date back more than 1,000 years and are believed to be worth more than 1 million pounds ($1.5 million).

The discovery is among the largest hoards of Anglo Saxon coins ever found in Britain. According to the Buckingham Advertiser, the dig was organized by the Weekend Wanderers Detecting Club and included more than 100 people from across Britain. The hoard was found inside a lead bucket 2 feet below the surface. Archaeologist Ros Tyrrell, the Finds Liaison Officer for Buckingham, was at the rally to help excavate and record any finds made on the day. 

“This is one of the largest hoards of Anglo Saxon coins ever found in Britain, and when the coins have been properly identified and dated, we may be able to guess at why such a great treasure was buried,” a Bucks County Museum spokesman said.

The coins are extremely well-preserved and show the faces of some of the kings of England, including Ethelred the Unready (A.D. 978–1016), who is credited with introducing the prototype for the English Grand Jury, and Cnut, also known as Canute (A.D. 968–1035), a king of Denmark, England, Norway, and parts of Sweden, who some historians maintain was the most effective king in Anglo-Saxon history, despite not being Anglo-Saxon.

“Ethelred opened a mint in Buckingham in conjunction with Cnut,” said Pete Welch, founder of Weekend Wanderers. “I think there’s a probability there’s a link between the mint at Buckingham and the coins.”

Huge clump of silver coins found in a pit in Lenborough. (Screenshot/Feroxchaser/YouTube)
Huge clump of silver coins found in a pit in Lenborough. Screenshot/Feroxchaser/YouTube

“At the moment it looks like a find of national importance,” said Welch, who described the discovery as being equal in importance to the Staffordshire Hoard found by a metal detectorist in 2009.

The Staffordshire Hoard is the largest hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold ever found, consisting of more than 3,500 items, that are nearly all warlike in character. The discovery was made near the village of Hammerwich in Staffordshire in July, 2009, and is now on display in the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery.

In another huge discovery in 2014, an East Devon man found 22,000 buried coins from the time of Roman Emperor Constantine. 

The latest discovery has been sent to the British Museum for conservation and identification and it is hoped that a museum will then purchase the collection so that they will be made available to the public to see. 

Republished with permission. Read the original at Ancient Origins