SCI Trove of Viking-Age Treasures Makes Its Long-Awaited Public Debut

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Viking-Age Galloway Hoard Debuts in Scotland | Smart News | Smithsonian Magazine

Trove of Viking-Age Treasures Makes Its Long-Awaited Public Debut
The Galloway Hoard, a collection of 100 rare artifacts buried in Scotland around 900 A.D., is finally on view
Gold artifacts and an Anglo-Saxon cross
Experts describe the Galloway Hoard as the “richest collection of rare and unique Viking-age objects ever found in Britain or Ireland.” (National Museums Scotland)
By Isis Davis-Marks

SMITHSONIANMAG.COM
JUNE 3, 2021

In 2014, an amateur treasure hunter in Balmaghie, Scotland, unearthed the Galloway Hoard, a stunning collection of more than 100 artifacts, including medieval coins, an ornate silver cross and one of the largest silver Carolingian pots ever found. Described by National Museums Scotland as the “richest collection of rare and unique Viking-age objects ever found in Britain or Ireland,” the trove of treasures is finally making its public debut in a much-anticipated national tour.
As Alison Campsie reports for the Scotsman, experts have spent the past several years painstakingly removing mud and debris from the priceless objects, which went on view at the National Museum of Scotland (NMS) in Edinburgh last week. Items too fragile to be displayed are presented in 3-D.

“A unique combination of familiar objects, exotic materials and exceptional preservation makes the Galloway Hoard a fascinating find,” says Martin Goldberg, principal curator of medieval archaeology and history at NMS, in a statement. “Conservation work is allowing us to see these objects clearly for the first time, and our research so far is pointing to a new understanding of Scotland in the international context of the earliest Viking Age.”

According to a second Scotsman article by Campsie, recent research suggests that four different people—or groups—buried the hoard around 900 A.D. Separated into two layers (a top one and a three-part lower level), the trove includes silver arm rings bearing Anglo-Saxon abbreviations. Because the arm rings are of varying quality, the team suspects that their owners may not have been equal in status.
beads_curios_and_heirloom_objects_were_bundled_and_strung_together_resting_as_a_group_on_a_silver_brooch-hoop_at_the_top_of_the_lidded_vessel_in_the_galloway_hoard.jpg


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beads_curios_and_heirloom_objects_were_bundled_and_strung_together_resting_as_a_group_on_a_silver_brooch-hoop_at_the_top_of_the_lidded_vessel_in_the_galloway_hoard.jpg
These beads, curios and heirloom objects were bundled and strung together, resting as a group on a silver brooch-hoop atop a lidded vessel in the Galloway Hoard. (National Museums Scotland)

“There is something unexpected about the Galloway Hoard at every turn,” Goldberg tells BBC News’ Giancarlo Rinaldi. “It just keeps telling more and more stories.”

Per the statement, the top layer of the trove contained a package of silver bullion and a rare, intricately decorated cross. (Last year, NMS released stunning images of the newly restored artifact, which likely belonged to a high-ranking cleric or king, as Goldberg told the Observer’s Dalya Alberge at the time.)

Below these objects rested a layer divided into three distinct sections: first, a leather-wrapped parcel of silver bullion that was double the size of the first one; second, the four arm rings and a small wooden box housing three gold items; and, finally, an ornately carved silver jar filled with beads, brooches, bracelets and other curios.

Researchers used X- ray imaging to create 3-D models of the jar without removing its cloth covering. Based on radiocarbon dating of wool wrapped around the vessel, it dates to between 680 and 780 A.D., writes Laura Geggel for Live Science. Interestingly, the analysis revealed that the container wasn’t crafted in continental Europe, as the team had previously theorized.

“[T]he decoration and design show leopards, tigers and Zoroastrian religious symbols, all of which suggest that it is a piece of Central Asian metalwork from halfway round the known world,” says Goldberg in the statement.
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Detail of textiles wrapped around the lidded vessel (Historic Environment Scotland)
David Keys of the Independent posits that medieval Scots divided the trove into two layers to trick anyone who stumbled onto it. Hidden some three inches beneath the first level—a possible “‘sacrificial’ decoy”—the second held a richer, and far more valuable, trove of treasures. This layer boasted a rock crystal flask with a gold spout, a bird-shaped gold pin and quatrefoil brooches, among other artifacts.

Experts will continue to analyze the finds to learn more about the trove’s owners and life in medieval Scotland. According to a statement, the Arts and Humanities Research Council recently awarded $1.4 million (£1 million) to a joint, three-year research project spearheaded by NMS and the University of Glasgow.

“The conservation and the research work so far have really gone hand in hand, revealing fantastic details on individual objects which have enabled us to start piecing together the story of the hoard,” conservator Mary Davis tells BBC News. “I'm pleased that the exhibition conveys a real sense of that process of discovery.”
The Galloway Hoard: Viking-Age Treasure” is on view at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh through September 12. Afterward, the exhibition will travel to the Kirkcudbright Galleries (October 9–July 10, 2022) and the Aberdeen Art Gallery (July 30–October 23, 2022).
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Other observers have thought something was removed from the center of the cross as well. At least it did not meet the fate of so much other Viking loot - turned into hacksilver (chopped up) to pay small daily expenses.
 

goosebeans

Veteran Member
Thanks for posting this!

The textile piece is interesting. It almost looks as if they were repurposing two different pieces of cloth. One, densely woven joined with a more coarsely woven piece. Then they went to the trouble of pleating the pieces to make them follow the form/shape of the vessel. Hope Melodi chimes in with her thoughts on it.
 

Bones

Living On A Prayer
I always wonder, when these type of finds appear, did the treasure hunter garner a big paycheck or did their goobermint scoot off with claims of ownership?
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
I always wonder if it was buried to keep it from being stolen and
then not recovered, or stolen, then buried and not recovered. :D
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
As for the beads...missing spindles?
Some look like spindles and some look more like beads, but often in excavations you really can't tell unless the beads were obviously on a chord together or there is wear from a spindle shaft on the bead. And I suspect then as now, sometimes a bead might also serve as a spindle whorl for a time, I've done that.

My 10th century Anglo-Saxon Whorl from an excavation that has so many in the UK they gave them out to the student archeologists looks like a bead but spins perfectly.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I always wonder, when these type of finds appear, did the treasure hunter garner a big paycheck or did their goobermint scoot off with claims of ownership?
OK once again, in the UK (but not in Ireland) if you report a find properly (which is required by law) the finder gets 50 percent of the market value of the items. Laws allowing metal detectors and this 50 percent rule mean that the entire UK has been bursting with important finds especially over the last couple of years. Oh and don't report a find and try to sell it illegally (or do an illegal excavation) and get ready to go to jail.

In Ireland where you are required to turn the whole thing over to the State and receive nothing in return, most of the finds end up on the black market and/or in personal safes; not properly excavated and lost to history. Metal detectors are illegal to use, so of course, people hide them away and only use them to try to find things when they think no one is looking.

If you think that I feel that Ireland seriously needs to change things you are correct. The "turn it over for a pat on the back" works in Scandinavia where most people have a decent level of income and there are nearly 100 years of people being used to "public service" when it comes to archeology.

The "bride" works great in the UK, and it stops people from digging stuff up in their back yard on their own, they know they will get more money (and less chance of jail time) if they report it properly.

In Ireland, almost all finds are lost to history and end up as "out-of-place" artifacts even if someone in the family finds it in a safe and donates it to the National Museum where more often than not it sits in a basement because there is no money to show it properly.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Thanks for posting this!

The textile piece is interesting. It almost looks as if they were repurposing two different pieces of cloth. One, densely woven joined with a more coarsely woven piece. Then they went to the trouble of pleating the pieces to make them follow the form/shape of the vessel. Hope Melodi chimes in with her thoughts on it.
Quick look - to me at first glance it looks like a finer piece of plain weave (tabby) that's just plain back and forth weaving probably of some soft fiber, maybe some of the jewelry was wrapped in originally (just a guess).

Then a courser fabric that may be twill (hard to tell) that would be like blue jeans where a weft thread goes over more than one warp thread at a time, was placed over that fabric. I am guessing that this was the iron age version of a "burlap bag" and was probably made of a rougher material and the softer fabric was originally wrapped around the jewelry.

But that's just a guess from the photos.
 

goosebeans

Veteran Member
Quick look - to me at first glance it looks like a finer piece of plain weave (tabby) that's just plain back and forth weaving probably of some soft fiber, maybe some of the jewelry was wrapped in originally (just a guess).

Then a courser fabric that may be twill (hard to tell) that would be like blue jeans where a weft thread goes over more than one warp thread at a time, was placed over that fabric. I am guessing that this was the iron age version of a "burlap bag" and was probably made of a rougher material and the softer fabric was originally wrapped around the jewelry.

But that's just a guess from the photos.

I just came across this pic of the whole "vase". On the right it almost appears as if the fabric was cut to follow the design on the vessel. Not so much on the left though. I don't know. I just found it fascinating.

_78165522_largesilveralloycarolingianliddedvessel,imagecourtesyoftreasuretroveunit.jpg
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
If the Vase is pottery then double wrapping would help keep it from breaking when it was buried, again the inner cloth looks to be of a much finer quality (if simpler weaving) than the outer rougher cloth.

Most of these hordes were buried very quickly, a bit earlier usually by Roman families running from raiders that were burning their villas as things broke down or in this case possibly in the aftermath of a battle or other civil unrest.

Almost everyone intended to come back and get them or have their heirs do so, but as we are learning many-many people never did for various reasons.

If I had to bury something in pottery I would wrap it twice, probably once in a piece of linen or soft cotton, and then in a pillowcase or in this case a bag - especially if we were burying it quickly before taking off as fast as possible.

Another thing of interest with hoards like, this is the quality of what people left behind, imagine what they took with them? Think of the Tsar's wife and daughters who had so many jewels in their clothing (still unoticed|) that the bullets used to kill them bounced off in all directions before they died.

It was pretty common in times of danger for anyone who could wear some of their wealth on their persons, but wealthy people couldn't wear everything and common people didn't always dare to do so.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Old timers in SE Asia used to drop what they called 'hard rice' - ammo. It was sewn into a tight bag, then into a loose one. On imact the inside bag broke and the outside loose bag kept everything together.

Doubt that is relevant in this case, but M's comments brought it to mind.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Actually, Dozdoats this might be relevant, both in keeping the pot together and in having a bag for the contents to fall into if it broke. Again people expected to come back two of three months or years later, they were not intentionally putting things in the ground for 1600 years!
 
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