Wold Newton Hoard
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Wold Newton hoard | |
---|---|
Material | Roman coins Roman pottery |
Size | 1,857 coins |
Created | 294-307 |
Period/culture | Romano-British |
Discovered | 2014 Wold Newton, East Riding of Yorkshire England |
Present location | Yorkshire Museum, York |
The Wold Newton Hoard is a coin hoard dating from the early 4th century AD. It contains 1,857 coins held within a pottery container. It was acquired by the Yorkshire Museum in 2016.[1]
Discovery
The hoard was found by metal detectorist David Blakely on 21 September 2014 in a field near Wold Newton in the East Riding of Yorkshire.[2][3]
Contents
The hoard contains 1,857 copper alloy coins all of which are nummi, except for a single radiate. The nummi all date from the period AD 294-307 and the radiate from AD 268–270. The coins were found within a grey-ware jar dating from the 4th Century. The coins and their container were found alongside a fragmentary dish and other fragments of pottery, one of which may have been used as a lid for the ceramic jar.[3]
Significance
The Wold Newton Hoard is the largest Roman hoard of its type ever discovered in the north of England.[2]
Acquisition and display
After being declared treasure, the hoard was valued at just over £44,200. The Yorkshire Museum ran a fundraising campaign (launched on 25 July 2016[4]) to raise the money, which included donations from hundreds of people from around the world, £10,000 from the Arts Council/Victoria and Albert Museum Purchase Grant Fund and a donation of £9,981 from the American Friends of the Arts Fund.[2] The hoard went on public display on 1 June 2017 in the Yorkshire Museum as part of the York Roman Festival.[5]
References
External links
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