Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
News:
Metal detectorists and archaeologists - protect the future of the Portable Antiquities Scheme:
sign the petition to the British Prime Minister.
Please Support Us!
Donate with PayPal!
January Goal: $60.00
Due Date: Jan 31
Gross Amount: $0.00
PayPal Fees: $0.00
Net Balance: $0.00
Below Goal: $60.00

©
 0%
Treasure Gallery
lanx_detail.jpg
ps355515.jpg
ps248876.jpg
O06591A.jpg
e3_2_8e.jpg
History Hunters International > Forum > Revealing the Treasures of History > Great Treasures Revealed > Topic: Golden Boadicea necklet found
Pages: [1]   Go Down
Print
This topic has not yet been rated!
You have not rated this topic. Select a rating:
Author Topic: Golden Boadicea necklet found  (Read 54 times)
Description: "almost like a fairy tale"
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Solomon
Super Moderator
Silver Member
*

Karma: 21
OfflineOffline

Posts: 101


Errare Humanum est perseverare diabolicum


View Profile
« on: December 29, 2007, 11:43:10 AM »


The Torc Terminal with 1mm scale. Photographs by H. Snelling. � SHARP

The final link of what is believed to be a necklet owned by Queen Boadicea has been discovered in Norfolk.

The 2,000-year-old treasure is part of a gold torc, a type of Iron Age necklet, and was found by archaeologists in a field in Sedgeford.



The Sedgeford Historical and Archaeological Research Project believe it is the end of an Iceni tribe gold torc.

The torc, unearthed 40 years ago, is displayed at the British Museum.

Archaeologist Chris Mackie said the find, near Hunstanton, was "almost like a fairy tale".

"There is this 2,000 year-old torc which at sometime in its life was cut in two, and in 1965 we found one part of it - and after all these years, 40 years later, we have found the other and they will be joined together again - reunited."
Logged

Solomon
Super Moderator
Silver Member
*

Karma: 21
OfflineOffline

Posts: 101


Errare Humanum est perseverare diabolicum


View Profile
« Reply #1 on: December 29, 2007, 12:09:52 PM »


Archaeological dig in Sedgeford, near Heacham

Sedgeford Historical and Archaeological Research Project

The Sedgeford Historical and Archaeological Research Project (SHARP) is a long-term, multidisciplinary research project based in north-west Norfolk, UK. It is involved in the investigation of the local history and archaeology, with a strong emphasis on community involvement, practical training and education. The Project attracts volunteer excavators and students from all over the world.

History

An Anglo-Saxon skeleton excavated by SHARP

In 1957-58, Peter Jewell of the University of Cambridge excavated small trenches on the "Boneyard Field" and recorded a number of human burials and features.

SHARP was founded in 1996, initially focussing on the same Anglo-Saxon cemetery located to the south of the modern village of Sedgeford. Since that time, SHARP has investigated many other sites within the parish using a variety of methods: open-area excavation, test-pitting, geophysical survey, fieldwalking and metal detection, and the analysis of historical documents.

Organisation

SHARP is made up of a team of directors, supervisors, trustees and committee members, along with up to 70 excavators during June-August.

Education

The Project is one of the largest training digs in the UK, providing practical training in excavation and recording as well as running taught courses on aspects of the site: e.g. skeletal remains, artefacts, and Anglo-Saxon history. However, unlike most training sites, it is independent from any one academic institution and operates as a registered UK charity (number 1064553).


Archaeologist looking at a find in the boneyard

Sites and finds of interest

One of the "Boneyard" open-area excavations

Over the years a number of particularly unusual discoveries have been made:

    * The Sedgeford Torc - discovered by SHARP in 2004, this gold Iron Age torc terminal was reunited with the rest of the artefact in the British Museum. The first half of the item was discovered in 1965.
    * The Sedgeford Hoard - recovered during the 2003 excavation season. This Iron Age hoard of Gallo-Belgic gold staters was hidden in a cow bone and identified by x-ray.
    * Iron Age horse burial - discovered on the same day as the hoard of coins.
    * The Body in the Oven - unexpectedly found in 2006 from a Roman site. This human skeleton had been burned in a feature believed to be a fire-pit for a grain-dryer or malting oven. Several unusual aspects of the find led to it being described as "an unsolved murder" in the local and national press. There are few equivalent cremation/inhumations from this period anywhere in Europe.
    * Boneyard - the whole site, excavated from 1996-2007, revealed part of an extensive cemetery. Almost 300 articulated human inhumations were lifted, reflecting only a portion of the actual number buried. In addition SHARP recovered a huge quantity of disarticulated human bone (charnel). The size of this burial site, particularly as there is no large population centre known nearby, makes it a very unusual skeletal archive.
Logged

Tags: Boadicea Boudicca torc metal detector 
Pages: [1]   Go Up
Print
 
Jump to:  

Powered by SMF 1.1.4 | SMF © 2006-2007, Simple Machines LLC
History Hunters Worldwide Exodus | TinyPortal v0.9.8 © Bloc