The Walkington Hoard is a hoard of Corieltavian gold staters. They are a widely-scattered hoard which have been found by metal-detectorists over the course of a decade.[1]
Walkington Hoard | |
---|---|
Created | c. 40BC-AD20 |
Period/culture | British Iron Age |
Discovered | 1999-2008 Walkington, East Yorkshire |
Present location | Yorkshire Museum, British Museum, Sewerby Hall |
Coordinates | 53°49′47″N 0°30′07″W / 53.82961974°N 0.50186092°W |
Identification | YORYM : 2005.2202 PAS: IARCH-212957 |
Discovery
editThe first portion of the hoard was discovered in November 1999 and consisted of eleven coins. Subsequent batches were found in: September–October 2000 (35 coins), 2001 (21 coins), 2002 (13 coins), August–September 2003 (18 coins), 2005 (two batches of six coins and three coins), October 2007 (3 coins), 2008 (six coins). At least 116 coins have thus so-far been discovered.[1]
Acquisition and display
editThe first two groups of coins, the batches of 11 coins from 1999 and 35 coins from 2000, were acquired by the East Riding of Yorkshire Council and went on display in Sewerby Hall. The group of 35 coins were acquired for a cost of £13,500.[2] The group of 18 coins from 2003 was acquired by the Yorkshire Museum.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b "IARCH-212957". Portable Antiquities Scheme. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
- ^ "£13,500 secures hoard of gold coins for county". Yorkshire Post. 8 November 2001.
- ^ "COLLECTION ITEM: WALKINGTON HOARD". York Museums Trust. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
External links
edit- Andrew Woods from the Yorkshire Museum introducing coins from the hoard in 2014.