An English woman unearthed a rare hat pin from 1485 which might have belonged to King Edward IV, who reigned during the 15th century.
Experts told the publication that the jewel was made sometime in the 1400s and was designed as a sun, which was the personal emblem of King Edward IV. They think it might have been lost in battle, and there were many in Lincolnshire around that time.
“The jewel does bear a striking resemblance to the one in a well-known portrait of Edward IV from the Musee Calvet,” an official with Duke’s told the news outlet. He said it may have belonged to a courtier.
“The fact is we shall never know but it clearly belonged to someone of high status in the upper echelons of medieval society,” the official, named only as Mr. Schwinge, added.
According to the publication, museums and collectors may pay between $13,000 to $20,000 for the hat pin.
Grace, meanwhile, said she “didn’t have any idea” what it was at first.
“It was only later when I phoned some friends and did some research that I found out how special it was,” she continued.
“The possibility that it could have belonged to royalty is amazing and even if it didn’t, it would have belonged to someone of high status,” Grace told the news outlet, which added that she listed the pin for sale.
It is slated to be auctioned at Duke’s in Dorchester on April 26.
“Although the burst of energy inspired by the sight of three suns in the sky (Decoded Science’s Jennifer Young explains that the awe-inspiring presence of two extra suns stemmed from the refraction of sunlight through ice crystals in clouds) propelled the Yorks to initial victory, the brief period of peace that followed ended when Edward’s former ally and mentor, Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick—known as the ‘Kingmaker’ for his role in helping the young Yorkist ascend to the throne—turned against his protégé and allied with Margaret of Anjou, wife of the deposed Lancastrian Henry VI,” it says.
