Herefordshire hoard explained

Herefordshire Hoard
Created:850–900 (deposited)
Period:Viking
Discovered Date:2015
Discovered Place:Eye, near Leominster, Herefordshire, England

The Herefordshire Hoard is a hoard of coins and jewellery dating to the Viking period found near Leominster, Herefordshire in June 2015.[1] [2]

Discovery

The hoard was discovered by metal detectorists George Powell and Layton Davies near Eye, Herefordshire, near Leominster in 2015.[3] Under the stipulations of the Treasure Act 1996, they should have reported the find within 14 days. They did not report the find and instead sold it to dealers, except a few individual pieces which were reported to the Portable Antiquities Scheme's local representative, Peter Reavill.[4] The detectorists were illegally detecting on land owned by Lord Cawley.

Contents of the hoard

Much of the hoard had been sold prior to the conviction. Antique dealers in Cardiff and London were used to sell individual items from the hoard.

The hoard originally contained an estimated 300 coins, of which 31 have been recovered along with a silver ingot, a rock-crystal pendant mounted in gold wire, a gold bracelet, and a gold finger ring. The hoard was buried in the late 9th century, from which most of the objects date. The rock-crystal pendant is thought to be 5th or 6th century in date.

The economic value of the hoard has proved difficult to establish, as much of it is still missing and is presumed hidden or sold. One collector who bought 16 of the coins estimated the value of the whole hoard to be as much as £3 million.[5] It was reported in December 2022 that the thirty coins which had been recovered were valued at a proceeds of crime hearing at Worcester Crown Court at £501,000.[6] The missing 270 coins were also estimated to have a total value of £2.4m.

Conviction for theft

In 2019 the two detectorists were found guilty of theft and concealment of the find. The coin dealers Simon Wicks and Paul Wells were also found guilty under the concealment charge. Powell was jailed for ten years and Layton for eight-and-a-half. Wicks was jailed for five years. Wells fell ill during the sentencing hearing and was due to be sentenced at a later hearing in December 2019.[7] In December 2022, Powell and Davies were ordered to repay more than £600,000 each or face an additional five years of imprisonment.

Acquisition and transmission

Herefordshire Museum Service, part of Herefordshire Council, were, as of March 2020, in the process of acquiring the surviving parts of the hoard.[8]

In December 2020, it was announced that the story of the hoard was in the shortlist for the Current Archaeology 'Rescue Project of the Year'.[9] Peter Reavill discussed the hoard in an episode of the BBC Radio 4 series The Digital Human on 'Treasures' on 8 March 2021.[10]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Detectorists stole Viking hoard that 'rewrites history' . BBC News . 21 November 2019 .
  2. News: Detectorists hid find that rewrites Anglo-Saxon history . The Guardian . 21 November 2019.
  3. Mead . Rebecca . The Curse of the Buried Treasure . The New Yorker . 9 November 2020 . en-us.
  4. News: UK metal detectorists guilty of theft after concealing £3m hoard . 21 November 2019 . The Guardian.
  5. News: Viking Treasure Could Have Made Them a Fortune. Instead, They Stole It . New York Times . 22 November 2019 . Anna Schaverien.
  6. News: Herefordshire Viking hoard thieves must repay £600k . 21 December 2022 . 30 December 2022.
  7. News: Detectorists jailed for £3m Viking hoard theft . BBC . 22 November 2019.
  8. Web site: The Herefordshire Viking Hoard . 6 March 2020 . Hoverd, Tim . Reavill, Peter . Stevenson, Judy . Williamson, Gareth . Current Archaeology . 10 March 2021.
  9. Web site: Rescue Project of the Year 2021 – Nominees . December 2020 . Current Archaeology . 10 March 2021.
  10. 8 March 2021. The Digital Human: Treasure . Radio . English . 10 March 2021 . BBC Radio 4.