Talk About Hitting The Jackpot! The 2,173-Year-Old British Currency Hoard Was Found In Buckinghamshire, And Experts Estimate Its Value At £30,000

 The oldest hoard of gold coins in Britain, dating back 2,173 years, was discovered by a metal detectorist.


A metal detectorist has uncovered Britain's oldest hoard of gold coins dating back 2,173 years 

The 12 Iron Age artifacts were discovered by Stephen Eldridge while scouring fields in Buckinghamshire.

They were built in 150 BC by a tribe in what is now Picardy, France, according to experts at the British Museum.

According to speculation, the coins were likely transferred to Britain in return for Celtic mercenaries who were sent to Gaul in western Europe to fight the Romans.


Stephen Eldridge found the 12 Iron Age pieces while searching farmland in Buckinghamshire 

A hoard from this date is extremely uncommon, even though individual gold coins from this era have been discovered before.

The coins will now likely sell for £30,000 when they are put up for auction at London's Spink & Son.

In November 2019, Mr. Eldridge, 68, discovered the coins in the Buckinghamshire community of Ashley Green.


Experts at the British Museum identified them as originating from a tribe in what is now Picardy in France and made in 150BC

The Catuvellauni tribe first settled in the region about 150 BC, and during the ensuing century they grew to become the most dominant tribe in Britain.

Mr. Eldridge has put the coins up for auction with London-based coin specialists Spink after going through the treasure process.

The coins' roughly 75% gold content with an alloy of silver and copper was validated by scientific x-ray fluorescence analysis, indicating the economy in which Britain's first gold coinage were circulating.



The coins are now expected to sell for £30,000 when they go under the hammer at London auctioneers Spink & Son

Gregory Edmund, of Spink & Son, said: “Whilst individual gold coins of this period have been recorded across south east England, it is incredibly rare for a trove of this size or date to be uncovered. Contemporary local coinage was simply cast base metal issues called 'potins'. Whoever successfully imported this trove of gold coins would have undoubtedly wielded influence in the region.



They would have been exported, probably in exchange for mercenaries, equipment and hunting dogs to fight the Romans or other tribes in Belgium.  Twenty or thirty years after they were deposited we started to get the first British coins in the same style. These coins were in the wealthiest part of the English kingdom. A hoard of this size and period is unprecedented in the archaeological record.  There was one other hoard from this period of three coins found. These coins have been well used, it is very clear they are not fresh when they are put in the ground, but still retain remarkable details of a seldom-seen Iron Age art form.


After going through the treasure process Mr Eldridge has now put the coins up for auction with London-based coin specialists Spink

It is often speculated that the portraiture of this coinage was deliberately androgynous despite being modelled on the classical male god Apollo. The feminine styling is probably a reflection of the political significance of women in Iron Age society, that enabled such historical figures as Cartimandua and Boudicca to rise to prominence and our now national folklore. It is incredibly satisfying to assist in the proper recording, academic analysis and now sale of these prestigious prehistoric relics.”


Scientific x-ray fluorescence analysis confirmed the coins to be approximately 75 per cent gold with an alloy of silver and copper, pointing to the economy in which Britain's first gold coins circulated

Following the coroner's inquest, the British Museum made the decision to disclaim the coins, which means they now belong to the finder. 

The landowner will receive a portion of Mr. Eldridge's earnings.

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