Rare Anglo-Saxon Gold Coin found

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by FitzNigel, Aug 19, 2016.

  1. FitzNigel

    FitzNigel Medievalist

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  3. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    That would be fun to find, thanks for the link.
     
  4. spirityoda

    spirityoda Coin Junky

    great find. I like hearing about these stories. thanks for posting it.
     
  5. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Wow, interesting. Metal detecting in England appears not to be as regulated as it is in other countries where I have read that it is illegal.
     
  6. afantiques

    afantiques Well-Known Member

    Metal detecting in England appears not to be as regulated as it is in other countries where I have read that it is illegal.


    It is regulated to the extent that people are supposed to report certain finds, but they are encouraged to do this by being paid a fair market value for anything required by museums, etc.

    Usually, single coins are deemd 'lost' and are the finder's since the owner is unlikely to turn up, but stuff that appears to have been deliberately hidden is usually the property of the Crown,although, as said, the finder gets compensated.

    The hunter should have permission from the owner of the land, and usually the value of anything found is shared with the landowner.

    It is a tiny bit more complicated, but in general there is no regulation of actual prospecting apart from scheduled ancient monuments being out of bounds.

    The typical British detectorist is a bit of a geek who may live with his mother and wears clothes rather like layers of sacks, not a profile associated with criminality. So they just get on with it.

    Anything other than full compensation or the finder keeping the finds seems absolutely sure to ensure that many finds go unreported.
     
    TIF, FitzNigel, Kentucky and 2 others like this.
  7. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    It was reported through the PAS(Portable Antiquities Scheme) which makes the find documented and gives the coin a provenance. I own an Irish token from 1672 that was found in rural Shropshire back in 2002 - ordinarily such a find would not get a report - but this one did because it documented an Irish token being found in NW England, a bit of an unusual circulation pattern. Usually Irish tokens didn't leave Ireland.
     
    Theodosius likes this.
  8. FitzNigel

    FitzNigel Medievalist

    I do think Britain legislated metal detectors go the right way. I always s wanted to do some when I lived there, but never had the time...
     
  9. afantiques

    afantiques Well-Known Member

    There must be more left than has been found already. Britain looks small on a map but it is a good big size if taken field by field and mile by mile of beach and riverbed.

    And people have been losing and hiding stuff for a couple of thousand years.
     
  10. Nap

    Nap Well-Known Member

    chrsmat71 likes this.
  11. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

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