Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

A Saxon treasure hoard found at Chester, 1950

View through CrossRef
On 29th November 1950 workmen employed by the Merseyside and North Wales Electricity Board were relaying a cable on the west side of Castle Esplanade, Chester. In cleaning up the western side of the trench with a spade, 18 in. below the present pavement level and 29 ft. to the south of St. Martin's Court, one of the men cut through a small earthenware vessel and a shower of coins and silver bullion poured into the bottom of the trench. It is distressing to record that although the Grosvenor Museum is only 100 yards from the site, the discovery was not reported. No significance was attached to the find; one of the men stated later that they thought they were milk checks. Three of the men put handfuls of coins into their pockets; others were distributed to children near, and the rest shovelled back into the trench. The engineer-in-charge took several to his office for thepurpose of identification, but later forgot about them. One of the men sent some of the coins to Hunter Street Girls' School, by his niece, for identification, and the mistress immediately sent them to the Curator of the Grosvenor Museum.This happened on 10th December, and the Curator at once appreciating the significance of the discovery, set to work to recover as much as possible of the hoard, and reported the matter to the City Coroner. As a result he recovered a hundred coins, twelve ingots of silver, and a fragment of the vessel.
Title: A Saxon treasure hoard found at Chester, 1950
Description:
On 29th November 1950 workmen employed by the Merseyside and North Wales Electricity Board were relaying a cable on the west side of Castle Esplanade, Chester.
In cleaning up the western side of the trench with a spade, 18 in.
below the present pavement level and 29 ft.
to the south of St.
Martin's Court, one of the men cut through a small earthenware vessel and a shower of coins and silver bullion poured into the bottom of the trench.
It is distressing to record that although the Grosvenor Museum is only 100 yards from the site, the discovery was not reported.
No significance was attached to the find; one of the men stated later that they thought they were milk checks.
Three of the men put handfuls of coins into their pockets; others were distributed to children near, and the rest shovelled back into the trench.
The engineer-in-charge took several to his office for thepurpose of identification, but later forgot about them.
One of the men sent some of the coins to Hunter Street Girls' School, by his niece, for identification, and the mistress immediately sent them to the Curator of the Grosvenor Museum.
This happened on 10th December, and the Curator at once appreciating the significance of the discovery, set to work to recover as much as possible of the hoard, and reported the matter to the City Coroner.
As a result he recovered a hundred coins, twelve ingots of silver, and a fragment of the vessel.

Related Results

A Hoard of 12th Century Byzantine Coins
A Hoard of 12th Century Byzantine Coins
The aim of this paper is to present a hoard, which is most likely a fragment of a more extensive treasure and which was recovered by the Romanian judicial authorities in 2014. The ...
TRANSYLVANIAN SAXON POLITICS AND IMPERIAL GERMANY, 1871–1876
TRANSYLVANIAN SAXON POLITICS AND IMPERIAL GERMANY, 1871–1876
AbstractThis article investigates the potential influence of the newly formed Imperial Germany on Transylvanian Saxon politics. The Saxons were German-speaking settlers with long t...
Some aesthetic principles in the use of colour in Anglo-Saxon art
Some aesthetic principles in the use of colour in Anglo-Saxon art
In a paper in Anglo-Saxon England 3 N. F. Barley has drawn attention to the richness of Anglo-Saxon colour vocabulary, which, he suggests, emphasized the light–dark axis of colour ...
Skin Involvement by Erdheim-Chester Disease; A Case Report
Skin Involvement by Erdheim-Chester Disease; A Case Report
Abstract Introduction/Objective Erdheim-Chester Disease (ECD) is considered one of the rare forms of non-Langerhans cell histioc...
Settlement mobility and the ‘Middle Saxon Shift’: rural settlements and settlement patterns in Anglo-Saxon England
Settlement mobility and the ‘Middle Saxon Shift’: rural settlements and settlement patterns in Anglo-Saxon England
The traditional image of the stable Anglo-Saxon village as the direct ancestor of the medieval village is no longer tenable in view of growing evidence for settlement mobility in t...
A handlist of Anglo-Saxon lawsuits
A handlist of Anglo-Saxon lawsuits
There is no acknowledged corpus of Anglo-Saxon lawsuits. Scholars have had the benefit of Bigelow's Placita Anglo-Normannica for over a century, and this will soon be superseded by...
The earliest modern Anglo-Saxon grammar: Sir Henry Spelman, Abraham Wheelock and William Retchford
The earliest modern Anglo-Saxon grammar: Sir Henry Spelman, Abraham Wheelock and William Retchford
AbstractThe first scholars interested in Anglo-Saxon had to learn it by direct contact with original sources. Work on a dictionary preceded that on a grammar, notably through the e...
Introduction
Introduction
In his introduction to Thrymsas and Sceattas, Michael Metcalf stated: ‘There are two kinds of book to be written about Anglo-Saxon coins of the seventh and eighth centuries, namely...

Back to Top