Coin hoax almost changes Welsh history

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Bart9349, Mar 14, 2024.

  1. Bart9349

    Bart9349 Junior Member

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  3. WuntBeDruv

    WuntBeDruv Active Member

    This had so many red flags from the outset. What a stupid, pointless undertaking.
     
  4. GinoLR

    GinoLR Well-Known Member

    If it had been a genuine discovery, and not an hoax, it would have rewritten nothing. There were many people who travelled between Western Europe and the Near East in the 13th c. It's not like finding a precolombian gold jewel in a 13th c. English grave.
     
  5. WuntBeDruv

    WuntBeDruv Active Member

    If a genuine find, this would have represented a substantial addition to the extremely small number of securely contextualised finds of securely middle-eastern medieval objects in England (whether artefacts or coins). Currently the corpus of crusader-kingdom related material in Britain is very small, I believe a coin of Tancred was found on the Isle of Wight and there is also a Bohemond denier from Oxfordshire of the same type as described in the news article above - but that may be a relatively recent loss. People may well have travelled between western europe and the near east, but to find a coin hoard of this composition near the Welsh Borders reflects an unprecedented hoard/purse loss for the country. So while 'rewrite' is typical media exaggeration, the importance of such a find (if it had not been a hoax) can't be underestimated.

    However, it was obvious from the start that this was a plant - 13th century English coinage is of a higher silver quality than these and they would almost certainly have not been accepted for this reason, not least of all that they themselves were obviously not issued in the realm.
     
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