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Friday, May 20, 2011

Roman coins from third century AD discovered in a pot....


Saved for a rainy day: Hoard of 1,200 Roman coins unearthed on building site

Last updated at 12:29 PM on 20th May 2011
    Archaeologists have hit the jackpot after unearthing more than 1,200 coins buried in a Roman piggybank.
The extraordinary haul, believed to be more than 1,700 years old, was discovered in a small grey pot on a building site on former Army land in Colchester, Essex.
The find - hailed as a 'hugely significant national discovery' - has now been sent to the British Museum for analysis and will eventually be donated to the the town's museum. 
Pot of gold: Unusually, the coins were neatly stacked and stored in a clay pot
Pot of gold: Unusually, the coins were neatly stacked and stored in a clay pot
Philip Crummy, director of the Colchester Archaeological Trust, said the coins, which are made of copper with a thin silver coating, date from the third century AD.
He said: 'All the coins appear to have been put in the pot at the same time and then buried.
'Interestingly many of the coins inside the pot looked as they had been placed in there in little stacks.
'From this, we can visualise the owner sorting out his money in neat piles on a table so that he could count it accurately before putting the coins in the pot stack by stack.
'I imagine the owner was better off than the average person, but I am not sure if he would qualify as rich.'
Lucky find: The coins were unearthed during routine archaeological survey work on former Army property
Lucky find: The coins were unearthed during routine archaeological survey work on former Army property
Well-preserved: The coins date from around 270 AD - a time of turmoil in Roman Britain
Well-preserved: The coins date from around 270 AD - a time of turmoil in Roman Britain
The historian believes the hoard was buried for safekeeping during troubled times but a forgetful owner may have been unable to find it again.
Mr Crummy added: 'The burial of coins seems to have been more common in periods of unrest or uncertainty.
'The 270s was a difficult time in eastern England because of civil war in the Roman Empire and serious raiding along the coast by foreign peoples.'
The coins will be donated to Colchester Museum by developer Taylor Wimpey, which has rights to the find under treasure trove laws.
Company managing director Simon Brown said: 'This amazing collection of Roman coins is a hugely significant national discovery which brings even more life and colour to Colchester's rich and fascinating history.
'The hoard was discovered during the course of routine archaeological survey work at the former Hyderabad and Meeanee barracks site in March, and otherwise might have lain undiscovered for many years to come.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1389018/Saved-rainy-day-Hoard-1-200-Roman-coins-unearthed-building-site.html#ixzz1MtS7JlqU

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