It’s an unprecedented find that could revolutionize ideas about medieval England’s Germanic rulers: An amateur treasure-hunter searching a farmer’s field with a metal detector unearthed a huge collection of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver artifacts.
The discovery sent a thrill through Britain’s archeological community, which said on Thursday that it offers new insight into the world of the Anglo-Saxons, who ruled England from the fifth century until the 1066 Norman invasion and whose cultural influence is still felt throughout the English-speaking world.
“This is just a fantastic find completely out of the blue,” said Roger Bland, who managed the cache’s excavation. “It will make us rethink the Dark Ages.”
The treasure trove includes intricately designed helmet crests embossed with a frieze of running animals, enamel-studded sword fittings and a checkerboard piece inlaid with garnets and gold. One gold band bore a biblical inscription in Latin calling on God to drive away the bearer’s enemies.
The Anglo-Saxons were a group of Germanic tribes who invaded England starting in the wake of the collapse of the Roman Empire.
Their artisans made striking objects out of gold and enamel, and their language, Old English, is a precursor of modern English.
The cache of gold and silver pieces was discovered in what was once Mercia, one of five main Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, and is thought to date to between 675 and 725.
For Terry Herbert, the unemployed metal-detecting enthusiast who made the discovery on July 5 while scouring a friend’s farm in the western region of Staffordshire, it was “more fun than winning the lottery.”
The 55-year-old spent five days searching the field alone before he realized he needed help and notified authorities. Professional archeologists then took over the find.
“I was going to bed and in my sleep I was seeing gold items,” Herbert said of the experience.
The gold alone in the collection weighs 5kg and suggests that early medieval England was a far wealthier place than previously believed, said Leslie Webster, the former curator of Anglo-Saxon archeology at the British Museum.
She said the crosses and other religious artifacts mixed in with the military items might shed new light on the relationship between Christianity and warfare among the Anglo-Saxons — in particular a large cross she said may have been carried into battle.
The hoard was officially declared treasure by a coroner on Thursday, which means it will be valued by experts and offered up for sale to a museum in Britain. Proceeds will be split 50-50 between Herbert and his farmer friend, who has not been identified.
The exact location of the find is being kept secret to deter looters.
Bland said he could not give a precise figure for the value of the collection, but said the two could each be in line for a “seven-figure sum.”
Kevin Leahy, the archeologist who catalogued the find, said the stash included dozens of pommel caps — decorative elements attached to the knobs of swords — and appeared to be war loot. He noted that Beowulf, the Anglo-Saxon epic poem, contained a reference to warriors stripping the pommels of their enemies’ weapons as mementos.
“It looks like a collection of trophies, but it is impossible to say if the hoard was the spoils from a single battle or a long and highly successful military career,” he said. “We also cannot say who the original, or the final, owners were, who took it from them, why they buried it or when? It will be debated for decades.”
Experts said they’d so far examined a total of 1,345 items. But they’ve also recovered 56 pieces of earth that X-ray analysis suggests contain more artifacts — meaning the total could rise to about 1,500.
The craftsmanship was some of the highest-quality ever seen in finds of this kind, Leahy said, and many British archeologists clearly shared his enthusiasm.
Bland, who has documented discoveries across Britain, called it “completely unique.”
Martin Welch, a specialist in Anglo-Saxon archeology at University College London, said no one had found “anything like this in this country before.”
Herbert said one expert likened his discovery to finding Egyptian Pharaoh Tutankhamen’s tomb, adding: “I just flushed all over when he said that. The hairs on the back of my neck stood up.”
The collection is in storage at the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, where some of the items were to go on display starting yesterday.
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