Viking Jewellery – a Major Hoard is Discovered in Yorkshire, England
Expensive jewellery is being purchased by many individuals in increasing quantities in the current challenging and difficult fiscal times given that the value of gold is among the assets which are retaining their price at the present. Should you go back 1,000 years, Viking jewellery was only kept by men and women that could afford it, since it was really a kind of easily transportable wealth. Nowadays expensive jewellery is still picked up and stored by people who have the financial resources to do so.
In the Norse time period people put on their expensive jewellery to point out their wealth through brooches, necklaces and amulets. But there were times when such riches would have to be stashed away; probably during war or raiding. There are numerous instances of collections of Viking jewellery being located in Britain, which might have been hastily covered up by the owner. They possibly didn’t live to recover it.
An extraordinary Viking hoard of jewelry was found, and a father and son who are metal-detector hobbyists were in recent months paid 1million when their findings were purchased by two British museums. These men were metal detecting in a field near Harrogate, North Yorkshire, when they struck lucky and discovered the 1000 year-old treasure. The find was announced as the most significant and most important to be found since 1840. The silver expensive jewellery has been exhibited in London and Yorkshire. It was valued at 1,082,000 and after 2 years of fundraising, was acquired by the British Museum and the York Museum Trust.
Finds like these can inform us a good deal about the manner in which the Norse women and men lived and traded and also how far the reach of the Viking empire extended. A few of the pieces unearthed in a second English field were from as far-off as Afghanistan, not to mention Russia, Scandinavia and Continental Europe. Perhaps the most remarkable unusual jewellery pieces was a artistically etched silver cup, calculated to be worth upwards of 200,000. It contained 617 coins, silver fragments, ingots and rings. The cup also helped safeguard the items inside.
Secret Items of Expensive Jewellery Unearthed
It is believed it was concealed by a Viking noble who buried it during the unrest following on from the overthrow of the Viking kingdom of Northumbria in 927 by the Anglo-Saxon king Athelstan. It is thought he was not able to return to the hoard, possibly because of turbulence throughout the period. Coins also give good clues regarding the time when the hoard was hidden. Investigations would suggest the treasure goes back to AD927 or 928.
Cleaning and inspection was painstaking, with analysts even working with a porcupine spine, in order to safeguard the delicate collection. This method, performed under microscope, has now revealed elaborate designs which were unseen until dirt and grime was removed. Professionals uncovered tiny scratch marks made in the precious metal – proof the fact that the makers tested the silver before they began work. The details of the artistry and magnitude of the hoard has impressed curators at the British Museum who say there’s been nothing like it unearthed for over 170 years. They said the size and spread of material gives an insight inside the political background, and the social diversity of the Viking world.
As you can imagine, the metal detectorists, David and Andrew Whelan from Leeds, were truly ecstatic. They said they had always dreamed about locating a hoard but to locate one from such a amazing period of history is actually mind-blowing. Aside from the money, the men hope men and women will love viewing the objects on display in York and London for many years to come.
Yorkshire is among the locations which shows a substantial Viking influence, as also does Orkney, where Ola Gorie makes her designer jewelry. A few of her designs show the Viking influence that is definitely still a proud heritage for Orcadians. Viking art has been discovered in tombs and churches and churchyards here. And hidden Viking jewellery has been discovered here too.
Folks in Orkney today enjoy putting on expensive jewellery for special occasions, very much like their forebears back in the days of the Norse earls. But they are not going to dig a hole and bury their treasures during troubled times. And Ola Gorie jewellery is not likely to break the bank.
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