Spectacular Hidden Treasures Found in Recent Decades
1. Billion Dollar Hindu Treasure
In
June 2011, a most spectacular treasure consisting of billions in gold
and jewels was found in six underground chambers of the Sree
Padmanabhaswamy Temple, located in Kerala province in southern India.
The
treasure, worth an estimated 500 billion rupees (around £7bn),
established the temple as one of India's richest. Among the objects
found were goldnecklaces weighing 5.5 pounds, a golden bow, a golden
rope, bangles, antique silvers, one ton of gold in the shape of rice
trinkets, sacks full of diamonds, thousands of pieces of antique jewelry
studded with diamonds and emeralds, 37 pounds of gold coins from the
East India Company, 18 Napoleonic coins, precious stones wrapped in silk
bundles, and sovereigns bearing a seal from 1772.
Sree
Padmanabhaswamy was built in the 16th century by the kings of the
Kingdom of Travancore to serve as a royal chapel for the rulers of
Travancore. In June 2011, the Supreme Court directed the authorities
from the archaeology department and fire services to open the secret
chambers of the temple for inspection of the items kept inside.
Prior
to the discovery, the richest temple in India was thought to be the
Thirupathy temple in the southern Andhra Pradesh state, which contains
valuables worth 320 billion rupees.
2. Hanumandhoka Palace Treasure
3. Hoxne Hoard
On
November 16, 1992, a hoard of late Roman silver and gold was discovered
by a metal detectorist in the village of Hoxne in Suffolk, England.
The
hoard was discovered in a farmer's field, about 2.4 kilometres
southwest of the village. Peter Whatling, the tenant farmer, had lost a
hammer and asked his friend Eric Lawes, a retired gardener and amateur
metal detectorist, to help him look for it. While searching the field
with his metal detector, Lawes discovered silver spoons, gold jewelry,
and numerous gold and silver coins. After retrieving a few items, he and
Whatling notified the landowners and the police, without attempting to
dig out any more objects.
The next day, a team of archaeologists
from the Suffolk Archaeological Unit carried out an emergency excavation
of the site. The entire hoard was excavated in a single day, with the
exception of numerous large blocks of unbroken material left for
laboratory excavation.
The treasure was buried in a small chest
filled with items made of precious metals, sorted mostly by type, with
some in smaller wooden boxes and others in bags or wrapped in fabric.
The coins of the hoard date it after AD 407, which coincides with the
end of Britain as a Roman province. The owners and their reasons for
burying the treasure are unknown, but it was carefully packed and the
contents appear consistent with what one very wealthy family might have
owned.
The hoard consists of 14,865 Roman gold, silver, and
bronze coins from the late fourth and early fifth centuries, and
approximately 200 items of silver tableware and gold jewelry.
The
objects are now in the British Museum in London, where the most
significant pieces and a selection of the rest are on permanent display.
In 1993, the Treasure Valuation Committee valued the hoard at £1.75
million (today £3.02 million).
4. 2,000-Year-Old Archeological Treasure
In
1970, after the Six Day War, the Siebenbergs married and decided to buy
a house in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem's Old City, Israel.
Once
settled in their new home, Theo Siebenberg was convinced that their
house was built over significant archaeological remains. At that time,
archaeological discoveries by Hebrew University archaeologists in the
Jewish Quarter, including the area around the Siebenberg's home, were
making headlines. However, archaeologists were skeptical of Siebenberg's
premonitions, so Theo decided to conduct and finance the excavations
himself.
The excavations carried out underneath the Siebenberg
home in the course of 18 years have revealed remains of ancient
dwellings, rooms cut from rock, Mikvah's (ritual baths), aqueducts, a
huge cistern, and burial vaults reaching back 3,000 years to the days of
King Solomon and the first temple period, as well as the Second Temple
and Byzantine periods. They have also found rare artifacts, including
pottery, glass, mosaics, coins, jars, and weapons.
Presently, "Siebenberg House" is a museum below the house on 5 Beit HaShoeva Alley in the Old City of Jerusalem.
5. Staffordshire Hoard
On
July 5, 2009, Terry Herbert came across a hoard with his 14-year-old
metal detector as he searched a field near his home in Staffordshire,
England.
The treasure, believed to date back to the Seventh
Century, contains around 5 kg of Gold and 2.5 kg of silver, far bigger
than previous finds. Many of the items in the hoard are warfare
paraphernalia, including sword pommel caps and hilt plates, often inlaid
with precious stones. Experts said that the collection of more than
1,500 pieces, tentatively dated to the 7th or 8th centuries, may have
belonged to Saxon royalty of Mercia.
Mr. Herbert, who has
been metal detecting for 18 years, came across the buried hoard after
asking a farmer friend if he could search on his land. He said, ''I have
this phrase that I say sometimes, 'spirits of yesteryear take me where
the coins appear,' but on that day I changed coins to gold... I don't
know why I said it that day, but I think somebody was listening and
directed me to it... Maybe it was meant to be, maybe the gold had my
name on it all along, I don't know."
The treasure was valued at
£3.285 million and has now been purchased by the Birmingham Museum &
Art Gallery and the Potteries Museum & Art Gallery.
6. Viking Hoard
On
January 6, 2007, David Whelan, a semi-retired businessman from Leeds,
and his son Andrew discovered the Harrogate hoard using metal detectors
near the town of Harrogate in North Yorkshire, England.
The
Viking treasure consists of 617 silver coins and 65 other items,
including ornaments, ingots, and precious metal, which were hidden in a
gilt silver vessel lined with gold that was made in France or Germany
around 900.
The coins date from the 10th Century and come from
all over Anglo-Saxon England, as well as parts of Asia. Reports indicate
that the coins bear Islamic, Christian, and pre-Christian Norse pagan
symbols.
The necklaces, one of which is made of solid gold, show evidence that the hoard belonged to a Viking noble.
A
rare gold arm ring (possibly from Ireland) was also found, along with a
hacksilver (fragments of cut metal sometimes used as currency).
The
first theory as to a likely tenth-century occasion for such a careful
burial was that it had belonged to a wealthy Viking leader during the
unrest that followed the conquest of the Viking kingdom of Northumbria
in the year 927.
The independent Treasure Valuation Committee
valued the hoard at £1,082,000. The hoard was purchased jointly by the
York Museums Trust and the British Museum, with funding from the
National Heritage Memorial Fund, The Art Fund, and The British Museum
Friends.
7. Ophel Treasure
On
September 9, 2013, a treasure was found during a Hebrew University
excavation at the foot of Temple Mount in Jerusalem. It consisted of two
bundles containing 36 gold coins from the Byzantine era, gold and
silver jewelry, a gold medallion with a menorah, and a 10-centimeter
medallion with a ram's horn and a Torah scroll etched into it.
The
hoard was buried in a small depression in the floor, along with a
smaller gold medallion, a gold coil with a silver clasp, and two
pendants, all of which are believed to be Torah scroll ornamentations.
The
discovery was unearthed just five days into the latest phase of the
Ophel excavation, and can be dated to the late Byzantine period (early
seventh century CE). The gold treasure was discovered in a ruined
Byzantine public structure a mere 50 meters from the Temple Mount's
southern wall.
Given the date of the items and the manner in
which they were found, archaeologists estimate that they were abandoned
during the Persian conquest of Jerusalem in 614 CE. The 36 gold coins
can be dated to the reigns of different Byzantine emperors, ranging from
the middle of the fourth century CE to the early seventh century CE.
8. Frome Hoard
In April 2010, metal detectorist Dave Crisp found a hoard of 52,503 Roman coins near Frome in Somerset, England.
According
to Mr. Crisp, his detector gave a "funny signal," prompting him to dig
through the soil. So, he put his hand in, pulled out a bit of clay, and
there was a little Radial, a small bronze Roman coin.
Initially,
Mr. Crisp unearthed 21 coins in the field. However, when he came across
the top of a pot, he began to realize the significance of his find and
notified the authorities.
Archaeologists set about the delicate
task of excavating the 2-foot-tall pot and its contents. The hoard was
taken to the British Museum so that the coins could be cleaned and
recorded.
The coins that were contained in the ceramic pot date
from AD 253 to 305. Most of the coins are made from debased silver or
bronze. The hoard was the equivalent of four years of pay for a Roman
legionary, and could now fetch at least £250,000. Weighing 350 pounds,
the coins may have been buried as an offering for a good harvest or
auspicious weather.
The Museum of Somerset in Taunton, using a
grant from the National Heritage Memorial Fund, has acquired the hoard,
which was officially valued at £320,250.
9. Ringlemere Gold Cup
In
2001, Mr. Cliff Bradshaw, an amateur archaeologist and metal
detectorist, found a hoard in the Ringlemere barrow near Kent, England.
Mr.
Bradshaw's main area of interest is the early Anglo-Saxons of 400AD -
600AD, which led to him studying and scouring the local countryside of
southeast Kent for Anglo-Saxon remains. In the course of his
explorations as a detectorist he found a number of items, including a
beautiful silver Anglo-Saxon strap end, three sceattas, and many brooch
fragments which were fairly close together. The number and proximity of
these items led him to believe that they were not simply accidental
losses but that this was an inhabited Saxon settlement, and that he
would find a burial mound nearby.
Over the months when he had
access to the field, he carefully scanned all aspects of the land. After
a while, he found an Anglo-Saxon gilded brooch at a depth of eight to
ten inches. Pleased with the previous finding, he continued his search
on the northern perimeter of his suspected Saxon burial site, where he
found a 14cm tall cup with corrugated sides, which was badly crushed by a
plough.
The cup resembled a late Neolithic (approximately 2300
BC) ceramic beaker with Corded Ware decoration, but dates to a much
later period, which is the reason why Bradshaw notified the authorities.
The
hoard was bought by the British Museum for the amount of £270,000
(roughly US$520,000). The money was split between Mr. Bradshaw and the
Smith family, who own Ringlemere Farm.
The money to secure the
cup for the nation was raised through contributions by the Heritage
Lottery Fund, the National Art Collections Fund, and The British Museum
Friends. This also enabled the site to be properly excavated, revealing a
funerary complex from the Early Bronze Age.
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