A hoard of Viking Age treasure dated to around 1,000 years ago has been discovered by metal detectorists.
John Crowe and David O’Hare uncovered the hoard in May this year while metal detecting on the Isle of Man—a self-governing British Crown dependency located between Great Britain and Ireland in the middle of the Irish Sea.
The hoard consists of around 36 silver Viking Age coins—both whole and fragmented—and has now been declared Treasure by the Isle of Man Deputy Coroner of Inquests Rebecca Cubbon, Manx National Heritage announced.
The Viking Age was a period in medieval history roughly between the late 8th and 11th centuries when Norsemen known as Vikings—a Scandinavian seafaring people—raided, colonized and traded widely across Europe and beyond.
The Isle of Man has a rich Viking history—the Norsemen first arrived in the Irish Sea region in the 9th century, raiding and trading before eventually settling. The Isle of Man’s strategic location in the center of the British Isles made it an ideal location as a trading post for the Vikings, and then later as a place to settle.
Stock image: A man looking for treasure with a metal detector. A Viking Age coin hoard was found on the Isle of Man by two metal detectorists. Stock image: A man looking for treasure with a metal detector. A Viking Age coin hoard was found on the Isle of Man by two metal detectorists. Tomasz Majchrowicz/iStock/Getty Images Plus
The legacy of the Norsemen is evident on the island, with Viking burial mounds, settlements and other archaeological remains still visible. Numerous artifacts and burials from this period have also been uncovered on Man.
After the latest discovery of the hoard by Crowe and O’Hare on the island, the treasure was studied by Kristin Bornholdt Collins, an independent researcher and numismatist based in New Hampshire. Collins, a leading expert in Viking Age coins from the Isle of Man, confirmed that the hoard includes coins minted in various locations across England and Ireland between roughly A.D. 1000-1065. It appears that the hoard was abandoned shortly before A.D. 1070.
Some of the coins were minted during the reign of Canute (also spelled Cnut)—a Viking ruler who is best known for uniting the kingdoms of England, Denmark and Norway into what is often called the North Sea Empire. Canute ruled England from 1016, Denmark from 1018 and Norway from 1028—all until his death in 1035.
Among the other coins, those minted in Ireland feature the profile of Sihtric Silkbeard, a Viking ruler who was king of Dublin from A.D. 989 to 1036.
Metal Detectorists Discover Viking Treasure Hoard Hidden for 1,000 Years
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