Treasure trove of gold and silver coins of the Middle Ages
A hoard of 600 medieval coins worth £150,000 found by amateur detectorists, believed to be the biggest found in decade, has been declared treasure. Seven men found the coins on the Culden Faw Estate, Buckinghamshire in April 2019 including 12 rare gold nobles from the reign of Edward III.
The find, nicknamed the ‘Hambleden Hoard’, is the biggest gold and silver collection discovered in the UK for a decade. The men, more used to dig up shotgun shells and thimbles than treasure, were astonished to find coin after coin from the hidden ancient hoard. Over four days they excavated 627 coins – including 12 ultra-rare full gold nobles from the time of the Black Death.
A hoard of 600 mediaeval coins worth £150,000 was discovered in Buckinghamshire.
Mr Butler describes the 12 gold nobles from 1346 to 1351 as extremely rare with only 12 known examples found during a 1963 survey. The rest of the hoard – 547 silver pennies from the reigns of Edward I and II, 21 Irish pennies, 20 continental coins and 27 Scottish pennies from the reign of Alexander III, John Balliol, and Robert the Bruce – were more commonly found. It will now be left for the museum to negotiate a settlement with the finders and landowners, none of whom was present at the hearing. Speaking at the time of the find, Mateusz Nowak, a hospital cleaner from Newcastle, said: ‘It felt unreal. ‘After finding the hoard, and then clearing the area, we had to expand the search twice more because we were finding so much. ‘It was a miracle moment after moment for everyone.’
Museums will now be able to bid for the rare coins after they were declared treasure by a coroner.
The find was made at an organized rally which was held on a field near Hambleden, a village recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086. Under the rules of detecting and treasure finding, anything over three coins is considered a ‘hoard’ – meaning it has to be declared to organizers.
The haul includes a number of rare coins, only discovered in the British Isles on one other occasion in 1963 when 12 were found. The group found found 276 silver coins and nine gold nobles on the first day of their search. The area was cleared and announced jointly by the team who were then left to work alone. They admit it got ‘absolutely hectic’ when news of the find got round the festival. Detectorists from all over the world who were at the festival came to take a look, as the four due out coin after coin.
On the first day they found 276 silver coins and nine gold nobles, and all admit they barely slept due to excitement. Over three days the team’s hoard grew to 545 silver coins plus fragments, and 12 gold nobles. Some of them have been doing the hobby for less than a year at that time. Anni Byard, finds liaison officer for the areas was called to oversee the excavation and the location of each coin was painstakingly plotted on a grid. At the time the men said it would later be independently evaluated before being sold, with the value separated from the landowner.