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The Jerusalem Post

Viking nobility ring, rare coins unearthed by child playing with metal detector

 
Anglo Saxon and Anglo Viking coins dating from the tenth century are displayed at the British Museum in London March 4, 2014. The coins are part of a major new exhibition 'Vikings: Life and Legend' which runs from March 6 to June 22 (photo credit: TOBY MELVILLE/REUTERS)
Anglo Saxon and Anglo Viking coins dating from the tenth century are displayed at the British Museum in London March 4, 2014. The coins are part of a major new exhibition 'Vikings: Life and Legend' which runs from March 6 to June 22
(photo credit: TOBY MELVILLE/REUTERS)

The coins featured a cross which, according to the museum’s statement, indicated that the coins are from late within King Bluetooth’s rule. 

Hundreds of Viking, Germanic, and Arabic silver coins and a silver ring were discovered by a young girl playing with a metal detector in Denmark, a local museum announced on Friday.

The little girl was playing in a cornfield located 5 miles from Viking fortress Fyrkat when she made the discovery.

“A hoard like this is very rare," Lars Christian Norbach, director of the North Jutland Museum. The coins will be displayed at the museum and the girl has received an undisclosed amount of compensation for her find.

The museum said that the coin dates back to the 980s. This timeline would coincide with that of the Viking fort’s construction by King Harald Bluetooth, stated Norbach.

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"The two silver treasures in themselves represent an absolutely fantastic story, but to find them buried in a settlement just eight kilometers from Harald Bluetooth's Viking castle Fyrkat is incredibly exciting," museum archaeologist and curator Torben Trier Christiansen said in a statement.

A museum assistant holds a Viking arm-ring at the British Museum in London December 14, 2011. The coins form part of the Silverdale Viking Hoard, which contains a total of 201 silver objects and a well preserved lead container, and was discovered in September 2011 with a metal-detector in the Silver (credit: STEFAN WERMUTH/REUTERS)
A museum assistant holds a Viking arm-ring at the British Museum in London December 14, 2011. The coins form part of the Silverdale Viking Hoard, which contains a total of 201 silver objects and a well preserved lead container, and was discovered in September 2011 with a metal-detector in the Silver (credit: STEFAN WERMUTH/REUTERS)

The coins and other finds 

The coins featured a cross which, according to the museum’s statement, indicated that the coins are from late within King Bluetooth’s rule. 

It is believed that King Bluetooth “introduced the cross coins as propaganda in connection with his Christianization of the Danes - i.e. as a further spread of Harald's message on the great Jelling stone, which was erected around the year 965”

In addition to the coins, the young girl unearthed 70 grams of silver.


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The silver comprises of “two ornately braided decorated balls on a small piece of cut silver rod, which was originally part of an unusually large ring pin.”

The museum stated that it was likely the ring belonged to a bishop or king, based on the high quality and quantity of the silver. The statement added that the ring had likely been looted during a raiding expedition

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