Coins discovery 'will re-write' Anglo-Saxon history

Blackleaf

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Historians say an entire chapter of the Anglo-Saxon period will have to be re-written after a metal detectorist found a huge hoard of coins in a field.

James Mather made the discovery of 200 complete silver coins, seven items of jewellery and 15 silver ingots in a field near Watlington in Oxfordshire in October 2015. Its full significance has now become apparent...


Coins discovery 'will re-write' Anglo-Saxon history

The Anglo-Saxon coins are said to point to some sort of an alliance in the 870s between Alfred the Great and a rival.


Sunday 29 January 2017
Sky News


Part of the huge hoard of Anglo-Saxon treasures

By Enda Brady, Sky News Correspondent, Oxfordshire

Historians say an entire chapter of the Anglo-Saxon period will have to be re-written after a metal detectorist found a huge hoard of coins in a field.

James Mather made the discovery of 200 complete silver coins, seven items of jewellery and 15 silver ingots in a field near Watlington in Oxfordshire in October 2015. Its full significance has now become apparent.

The find contained a mixture of extremely rare Anglo-Saxon coins and Viking silver, which provides a clearer understanding of the relationship between Alfred the Great, who ruled Wessex, and his less well-known contemporary Ceolwulf II of Mercia.

Some of the coins were minted with a 'Two Emperors' design, borrowed from the Romans, which shows that the currency was used in both ancient kingdoms.


The find has shed light on an alliance made in the 870s between Alfred the Great (pictured) and Ceolwulf


"This is an extraordinary find, one which re-writes Anglo-Saxon history," Xa Sturgis, director of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, which now houses the coins, told Sky News.

"The keeper of the coin room here came running up the stairs to tell me. The more they were excavated the more it became obvious how significant they are. These coins point to some sort of an alliance in the 870s between Alfred and Ceolwulf."

While Alfred is often described as the king who founded England, uniting Mercia and Wessex, very little is known of his rival Ceolwulf.

"These coins prove that there was a very real alliance between the two men at that time," added Julian Baker, coin curator at the Ashmolean.

"That alliance hasn't survived in the historical record until now. Alfred manipulated history to put himself in a better light. To date, history has overemphasised Alfred's record and almost completely neglected Ceolwulf.

"We can start re-writing that decade now, courtesy of the Watlington hoard."


The haul was found in a field in Watlington, Oxfordshire

The Ashmolean has until Monday 31 January to raise £1.35m to keep the coins and Viking silver in Oxfordshire and they are extremely close to that figure now.

More than 500 people in the local area have donated to the fund set up to raise the cash.

Mr Sturgis added: "Alfred is the only king in the history of England described as 'great'. But these coins show that in the 870s he needed Ceolwulf. It's incredible that we know so little about him and Alfred dominates everything. It's like he obliterated Ceolwulf."

The Watlington Hoard, as it is now known, is on public display at the Ashmolean as historians begin the process of re-assessing that period of Anglo-Saxon history.

Coins discovery 'will re-write' Anglo-Saxon history
 
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coldstream

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I've been watching The Vikings. It's based loosely on Norse Sagas of Ragnar Lodbrock and his sons. Ragnar was thrown into a pit of snakes by Aella, the King of Northumbria (the series used a lot of historical license to attribute it to the King of Mercia).. which led to campaign of revenge by a Viking coalition, known as the Great Heathen Army, who ravaged East Anglia, Northumbria, Wessex and Mercia.. between 865 and 878. Seems these would date from roughly this period, overlapping to the reign of Alfred, and likely the basis for any alliance with Ceolwulf.
 
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Blackleaf

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I've been watching The Vikings. It's based loosely on Norse Sagas of Ragnar Lodbrock and his sons. Ragnar was thrown into a pit of snakes by Aella, the King of Northumbria (the series used a lot of historical license to attribute it to the King of Mercia).. which led to campaign of revenge by a Viking coalition, known as the Great Heathen Army, who ravaged East Anglia, Northumbria, Wessex and Mercia.. between 865 and 874. Seems these would date from roughly this period, overlapping to the reign of Alfred.

The pit of snakes may or may not be true - nor maybe is the claim by the Vikings that Ragnar's sons tortured Ælla to death with a blood eagle (the Anglo-Saxons claim he died in battle at York on 21st March 867) - but the Great Heathen Army ("hæþen here" in Old English) certainly did invade what is now England in 865.

Alfred the Great ruled Wessex between 23rd April 871 and 26th October 899, when he died aged 50.

It was the Great Heathen Army which posed a threat to his kingdom of Wessex, leading to him going on the run in Somerset and taking refuge at an old lady's home, who asked him to mind the cakes she was baking. So preoccupied was he with the fate of his kingdom that he accidentally let them burn.

Alfred finally defeated the Great Heathen Army at the Battle of Edington in 878. He and the army's leader, Guthrum, signed a peace treaty which said the Danes could rule northern England - a kingdom which became known as Danelaw - whilst Alfred could continue to rule Wessex.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Heathen_Army#/search
 

Curious Cdn

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Do they talk about a clumsy Saxon House Carl named Butr Fingr who kept losing his money?