¶ Intro / Opening
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¶ Introduction to a Stunning Find
Welcome to this episode of Gone Medieval from History Hit. I'm Matt Lewis. A stunning find made by two metal detectorists has hit the news over this last week. The tiny gold book has images of two saints on its open pages. and a hole running all the way through it. So what might it be? Who might it have belonged to? And how did it end up in the ground in Yorkshire? All these questions I'll be asking to Buffy and Ian, the lucky discoverers of this beautiful piece.
¶ A Metal Detectorist's Dream
Thank you very much for coming to share this exciting story with us. Thank you for having us. Thank you. I mean, first off, I guess, congratulations. It must be a metal detectorist's dream to find something like this.
Yes, it's certainly beyond anything that I ever expected to find. I was just always very, very happy just to be metal detecting, finding bits of... rubbish and all sorts it's just being outside and if you find anything historical it's amazing but i would never have dreamt to finding something it's the holy grail of metal detecting it is yeah yes No, the Holy Grail is the Holy Grail. Well, it should be the Ark of Covenant, really. That's a line from the detectorists.
¶ Journey into Metal Detecting
Are you interested in a particular period of history? Do you go looking for anything in particular or do you have quite a general interest? No, I have a general interest in all history. I mean, I wasn't really interested in history at school at all or throughout my life until I started metal detecting.
and then for every piece you find that's distinguishable that you can actually see what it is especially if it's like a hammered coin or something and you have the monarch on it and you can find out the date and then you look it up and you find out all about them and their life and it's just fascinating and everything that you find and eventually it all kinds of joins up it's amazing I'm interested in all of it
So each of these finds is like a little entry to a rabbit hole for you. Yeah, yeah, it is. Yeah, yeah. Medieval finds, really. They're my favourites, especially the coins.
I was quite naive when I started metal detecting. I understood there was coinage around. It was quite obvious, but I didn't realise how they were made, how they were struck by hand. No, I didn't even know what a hammered coin was. And I saw, because we joined Facebook, groups and they were talking about hammies yeah so I said oh what's a hammy and they said oh it's a hammered coin well what's a hammered coin you know we really were quite green yeah very very green about the whole thing
¶ Metal Detecting Best Practices
And how long ago did you start metal detecting? I started in November. three years ago yeah yeah so that was 2017 yeah and i started in the april 2018 and that's where we met we actually met metal detecting Oh, fantastic. So relative newbies to be finding massive, important treasure as well.
Yeah, we do put in the hours though. Yeah, we go at least once a week, every week, twice a week if we can, especially in the summer when you can stay out longer, it's easier. Yeah, yeah. Are there good times of year for metal detecting? fit with the farming calendar and things like that? Is it easier to detect in ploughed fields?
Yeah, the summer is the worst time to go because the earth is just so dry. It's really good to go in the cold weather, in the wet weather. You get much better signals that way and it's easier to dig as well. And I always feel bad about every single hole. that I dig in the ground, whether it's going to disturb the soil and look bad afterwards. So we're really, really careful to put everything back as if we'd never been there at all and that's much easier to do in the winter.
It must be nice if you could get out in the nice weather though to do it and the longer days and the nice warm sunshine. It must be frustrating that it's better in the cold and the wet. Yes. It's incredibly difficult to dig in the hot weather. It's hot for a start. You've got the flies and it's just very, very difficult to put your spade down into the soil when it's dry.
¶ Discovering Sheriff Hutton's History
So what can you tell us about where you made this incredible find? How did you come to be in that area doing some metal detecting? So what we do is... Hang on. I don't think we should say all that. yeah we don't want to give our secret away okay yeah yeah no problem at all trade secrets we'll just cut to a bit where you've already told me all of this secretly so i can go out and find some really nice treasure and nobody else will know my brother lives in easingwald
which is in North Yorkshire, just south of York. And this particular permission, we decided to try and tie a weekend away and visit my brother. So we managed to find some accommodation and then I rang around a few farmers and we luckily came across this farmer called Patrick who he said well I've got crop on the field but there's a tiny little strip.
And you said, you're more than welcome to come along and spend your time. There was a strip where the crop had failed. The crop had actually failed. But it was only a tiny, weeny little bit. It was maybe 150 metres long, 50 metres wide, on a 45-acre field.
So we thought, well, you know, why not? You know, it's different metal detecting on historic ground. And when we arrived, it wasn't until we arrived, then we knew where we were. We knew we were going to Sheriff Hutton, but we didn't... really know the significance until we got there.
Sheriff Hutton was really important historically. And it's close to York. Yeah, it's close to York. But back in the early Middle Ages, it was actually a bigger town than York itself. I think there were 7,000 inhabitants. of Sheriff Hutton when I think there was only maybe 2,000 in York itself so it was a very very important place.
We knew it had links to the Neville family and Warwick the kingmaker and Richard III and also King Stephen. There's a Saxon Mott and Bailey castle on this farmland with medieval ridge and furrow fields. knew that the area was historically really important so we spent some time there but we actually didn't find anything first time around bar a henry the eighth sovereign penny which is tiny it was just in that little patch where the crop had failed yeah yeah but we're finding enough targets
To really keep us interested, you know, some little bits of broken buckles and musket balls, which are always good to get. We just really inherently knew that there was going to be something. There had to be something really good there. We just felt that it had to be.
And with the number of footpaths that were all coming together. Really, really old footpaths, ancient footpaths on ancient fields in a place with such history, going back for hundreds and hundreds of years. Yeah, and then we spent a couple of days there. We got on well with Patrick and his partner.
partner Natasha and we had a lovely time and off we went and then a couple of weeks later I got a text message from Pat and he said if you're interested I've just taken the whole crop off the fields it's all been harvested
¶ The Fateful Day of Discovery
Why don't you come back and see if you can find something? So we did. And take it over, Puffy. So we arrived, was it the very first day? Yeah, the very first day. So we had a cup of tea. I don't even know. Did we have a cup of tea? Yeah, we did because we were ordering a new coil for the detector. Yeah, we hadn't had many finds.
over the last few weeks and we thought we'd try a bigger coil so we spent most of the journey organizing this new big coil for the machine and and that was ordered so we're feeling quite positive about that and then as soon as we arrived Pat came over and he said, all right, hi, are you going straight out? And we were like, yeah, yeah, definitely.
And we'd been looking forward to this and we were really excited that the fact that the soil had been raked and everything that was in crop before was just completely flat. So yeah, that's a metal detectorist dream as well. So we headed out to where we'd been before, but the field that was completely covered in crops was also completely raked. So we both said, oh, let's try that one first.
So I went over there and Ian went to the back of the field and I stayed by the gate. I like gateways. I think that, you know, so many people will go through that one spot. The chances of finding something are much higher than going into the middle of the field, I feel, but it's not.
necessarily true but it's just what i feel so i was there and then i found a hammered coin yeah we think of james the first yeah 1605 oh no actually just before this i should mention i had had a couple of phone calls as we were walking to the field and it just made me really annoyed you know those adverts that you get when people ring up and say oh have you been in an accident lately that wasn't you
your fault but when you're all dressed up to go metal detecting it's so annoying when you have to stop and answer the phone you have to put your detector down put your spade down take your gloves off take your headphones off and then find you at your phone and then and answer it and it's an effort it's just it was really frustrating all that effort for a call you didn't want anyway yeah yeah you don't want it anyway
And that happened twice on the really, really short walk to this field. And so I was quite annoyed by the time I got there. And so we just started and I was just, oh, just come on, let's just get this done. Let's just start detecting. And, yeah, just found this coin almost immediately and messaged Ian on the... Did we have the walkie-talkies? Yeah, walkie-talkies. Walkie-talkies. And I said, oh, Hammond. And he said, oh, God, I can't believe it. Already. And then shortly after that, I found a...
type in not very interesting and and i think it's it was silver i'm not sure it was silver colored anyway it was there for about half an hour and and i was getting a bit fed up another i'm going to go back to where i found the hammered coin the previous time
¶ The Signal at the Footpaths
So I went through the kissing gates and at that point, through that gate, it's where some footpaths actually converge. Four footpaths. Yeah, they all come together in this one point. And I think also it's very close to the moat of the Mott and Bailey as well. So it's just a busy intersection, isn't it? Yeah, so I moved on to there, but because of all the footpaths, you get quite a lot of people walking past, and I don't know if you've seen that episode of Detectorists.
where they're starting to detect and there's walkers coming through the field. And every walker comes along and start talking to Lance. They say, hello. And he says, oh, hang on a minute. And he does that thing, you know, he has to put the detective on, put the space.
down take the headphones off and say yes and they say detecting are you yes you found anything no oh good luck then then he puts it all back on and then somebody else comes along he has to do the same as ah just leave us alone but anyway so i saw these walkers and i thought oh that's exactly what's going to happen and i've already taken all this stuff off twice to answer the phone
So as I saw this person coming towards me, I moved towards them and then turned my back to the footpath. So I didn't catch anybody's eye, so I could just carry on with it. And as I did that, I took one foot. onto the ploughed field and that's where I got the signal. That's how I immediately got the signal. Yeah it was sort of six inches into the ploughed field. Yeah just one footstep into the ploughed field where all these footpaths came together.
¶ Unearthing the Golden Book
And I thought, all right, dig it up. What is it? It's coming up as a 14 on the Equinox. But I'd never found gold before. And I didn't really, you know, when I get a 14, normally, as you dig down, the numbers can change. So if it goes up to a 15, it could be a hammered coin, or it could be a sheep tag, or it could be a ring pull, 50. is a ring pull or the numbers can go down and it can be a bit of lead or just you know just a bit of a button or something.
But as I dug down, the numbers didn't change at all. So that was giving me quite a good indication this could actually be something special. And Ian said that 14 is gold. So I was thinking, oh, maybe, maybe. So then I dug it up and I could just see a glint of gold, but it's never anything that good. As a metal detectorist, your chances of finding something really, truly amazing are so remote. It's hardly even worth thinking. about.
So I thought it was a sheep tag, which turns out it looks gold when you take the soil off or a ring pull. They're normally gold as well. But as I rubbed it off, I could see that it wasn't either of those things and it was in the shape of what looked like a little book.
But I didn't have my glasses on. It's really hard to have your glasses on and have your headphones on because it presses against the ears and the arms of the glasses and it hurts after a while. So no glasses. I'm quite blind without my glasses. And I'm thinking, what is this? And I could feel it was quite heavy as well.
and I thought well it looks gold and I thought maybe it was something had fallen off a charm bracelet or maybe something from a gift shop from a castle or something or you know when you go to the abbey gift shops and they did reproductions of things I thought it was something like that. so i thought oh it looks pretty from what i can see so i took a photo
and sent it to our friend, which is actually, it was a group messenger thing. So I sent it to Ian and one of our friends. And once I'd taken a photo of it and sent it, I could actually blow the picture up, you know, on my phone so I could see it properly and I could see what... looked like these medieval people on both pages. And I thought, oh.
that looks really special actually that looks really really nice I thought but what is it I just I've never seen anything like this before what is it if it's not a charm off a charm bracelet So then I posted it onto one of the really big Facebook metal detecting groups, which has got tens of thousands of people in it. I thought somebody will be able to tell me what it is if I put it on there.
nobody did and they were just saying wow that's amazing and what is it wow it's incredible and that was the only comments I was getting nobody was saying oh yeah I know what that is it's a whatever and so then I was starting to get a bit like
¶ Reactions and Expert Consultations
oh, well, maybe this is really, really special. And then I rang Ian. I don't normally, I'd normally run over to him dancing up and down saying, oh, look what I found. But this time I couldn't because I was shaking so much with excitement. And he said, what? Because he'd already seen the photo. And I said, can you come over here and look at this? And he said, well, you come over to me. And I was like, no, I can't. I literally, I can't move you. They'll have to come over.
so then he started walking over in a really sulky fashion didn't you yeah yes And then I started doing my gold dance, which is pretty much hammered coin and silver and gold, doing this dance. And he wouldn't even look at me. He wouldn't even lift his head up and look at me and join in the dance or anything. And then he just came over and he took it off me.
and said what did you say you said this is really important really important you said they're gonna take this off you and you're never gonna see it again i said no shut up shut up that's not no no And he said, just put it in your pocket. And I said, well, I need to go back and have a cup of tea or sit down or something. And I was just shaking so much. And Ian says, no way, I'm going back out detecting.
So he refused to take me back to where we were staying so I could have a cup of tea. And I couldn't move. I was just standing there. And then I tried sitting down. That didn't help either. And, yeah, eventually he came back, didn't he, after about an hour, after not finding anything. Was that an hour of desperately trying to find something better? Yeah, yeah. Yeah, which he couldn't. Well, no, that's not true. No, it is true. I did find a medieval...
gold on silver ring quite close it's a potential treasure item also it's not as good but then but in that time Ian had contacted yeah within 10 minutes of it being found yeah it's the first thing we did I'd send photographs of it to an archaeological friend of ours called Doc Broughton And she messaged back almost immediately saying, that is significant.
And then we contacted... Oh, because I put it on Facebook, we then had a phone call from Jules, Julian, who is the editor of the Treasure Hunting magazine. And he was so... super excited uh well over the top and that just added to my excitement and he's saying oh this is a is that when you let yourself get a little bit excited thinking this might actually really because i didn't just didn't believe it i just didn't believe that i had actually found something
as special as everybody was suggesting and I'm still reluctant to actually let myself go and truly believe it but he was saying yeah this is really really important and he's like wow wow Buffy I can't believe it wow
¶ Decoding Saints and Symbolism
We were having a chat last night actually because there was about an hour's window after it had been found where everything just accelerated exponentially, didn't it? And it was from when I looked at the image. I said, I think on the right-hand side is the graphic of... A medieval king. And that's his archbishop on the left-hand side. Something like that. You know, and so I thought, you know... Because it's so tiny as well. It's so small. It was difficult to read, first of all.
kind of knew it was medieval and knew it had some kind of monarch connotations to it because of the crown. And then within this hour, it went from that to becoming associated with the Middleham Jewel. And we couldn't quite remember the link, how it jumped so quickly. I think it was just so many people commented on it.
So somebody did actually point out that the figure on the right was St Margaret of Antioch with her dragon, which I'd never heard of. And then the suggestion was that it was St Peter on the left with his keys to heaven. And when you looked at it, that did kind of make sense. So then we were looking up who St Margaret was and we found out that she was the patron saint of difficult childbirth and pregnancy.
and found out all about her history too, that she was supposedly born in 300 AD and a Roman prefect had proposed to her. but said, if you want to marry me, you've got to renounce your Christian beliefs and go back to being a pagan. But she refused to. And then she was put in a room and tortured. And one of the tortures was being put in the room with the devil who appeared as a dragon.
and then the dragon swallowed her but because of her strong Christian beliefs she held up the cross that she was holding and that either irritated the innards of the dragon which then burst open and she emerged unharmed or he just coughed her back up, depending on which story you want to go with, but it's not supposed to have even existed in the first place. But then Joan of Arc said that she was one of the voices she heard, and that's when she just rose to stardom in the medieval ages.
because Joan of Arc said she heard her voice. So anyway, she became a venerated patron saint, Roman Catholics, in that time for childbirth and pregnancy. And then we couldn't work out why on the left-hand side was St Peter. why did you have somebody with the keys to heaven what did that have to do with childbirth and pregnancy what did they have to do with each other and then i was thinking do i know somebody who's uh quite religious we have a facebook friend david whose husband is a retired
Reverend. I hope I got that right. The Priory in Lancaster. Yeah. And so we sent him the photos and said, would you mind asking your husband if he has any idea what this is? But he's friends. with a professor of medieval history at Oxford. So he sent that to him and he said, no, it's not St. Peter, it is St. Leonard.
And St Leonard is also a patron saint of childbirth and pregnancy. And I thought, now that makes sense. So now we've got the two patron saints of the same thing. And that's kind of where we came in with you, because I think you mentioned they were two of the 39 venerated. saints of the Neville family. Hi, I'm Professor Susanna Lipscomb, and in my podcast, Not Just the Tudors, we talk about everything from sex to spying, wardrobes to witch trials.
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¶ The Item's Purpose and Purity
I think when I checked through, when Richard III established his college at Middleham, they were amongst the saints. that he ordered to be venerated so they must have had currency in that region you know they must have meant something in that region which would tie in with somebody who lived around there having them engraved onto this item that they used
and it obviously bearing some reference to childbearing or childbirth or that kind of thing so did you find out anything about what you think it is what the actual item is it's got a hole that runs all the way through it hasn't it down sort of the spine of the book effectively
So it was suggested that it might have been a page marker. So a piece of a leather thong would have passed through the hole that goes through the spine. And then that may have been used in a Bible or whatever, you know, a book, a manuscript that the person was reading.
it was suggested by the rich of the third society i think that it may have been part of a birthing girdle or a virgin's girdle and we'd never heard of that either so there we looked all of that up too oh yeah and a terminal bead on a rosary possibly yeah But it's difficult to tell, I guess, at this early stage exactly what it might have been. We have been told that people within those times would not have ever owned gold. They weren't allowed to own gold, were they? Yeah, peasants, serfs.
weren't allowed to even touch gold it was only the very noble and royal households that could have gold objects. So for somebody to have had this commissioned, to even have been able to be in that position where they could have gold, but then to have enough money to have an item like this commissioned in very pure gold.
there must have been high status or even royalty that's been suggested to us yeah so not just even rich enough to have been able to afford the gold to have it made but noble enough high enough up the elite of society to be allowed to have it yeah and it's just it's the most stunning piece i've never seen anything like it when we washed the soil off and held it into the sunlight yeah i've just i've never seen i mean
heard the expression you know all that glitters isn't gold you know so gold glitters but not like this it's just the most amazing piece of jewelry when you hold it into the sunlight it doesn't just sparkle it's like you're looking at a diamond there are rainbows that come off it and i'd never seen that before and i thought i was seeing things so then we went to our goldsmith friend
Jonathan and I said this to him and he said what you actually saw that I said yeah and he said that is an indication of its purity he said he'd only seen that once before in silver very very pure silver So it must have cost an awful lot of money to have been made.
quite interestingly gold will come out the ground untarnished oh yeah yeah so so that yeah that's how it came yeah yeah it comes out the same as it goes into the ground no matter how long it's been in the ground yeah so it doesn't rust or anything like that so if you clean it up and it's gold there's a fair chance it actually really is gold yeah yeah and it's heavy incredible so what happens now so this was a couple of months ago you found this
¶ Declaring the Treasure Find
What is happening with it now? Does it need to be declared as treasure? Does it go through a process? We contacted the Fines Liaison Officer almost immediately. Yeah, I got a phone call into the auction museum. the morning after to declare it. And Emily, the fine's liaison officer, phoned back a couple of days later after she received the photographs and was really, really excited.
And you have 14 days to declare the find. So we were well within those 14 days. And because of COVID, they've been quite reluctant to... invite people in to hand finds over. However, because of the significance of this find, they were quite keen for us to go straight over to York and hand it in. So I think that was about three weeks ago. It was three weeks after we'd made the final set. It was probably five weeks ago. Gosh, it's been that long. Yeah.
We did everything we were supposed to do as soon as we got it. We started the process because we're very responsible detectorists. We know the law, the Treasure Act, and everything that we're supposed to do when we did that. As I said, it's just so beautiful. I wanted to be able to share it with as many people as possible and thought of it being in a museum for the whole world to see. That's the detectorist's dream, I think. History has made this world of ours.
I'd like to tell you about my show, Dan Snow's History Hit, that really explains everything that's ever happened. The origin stories of the cities we inhabit, or of what's in our kitchen cupboards. Why we've always been drawn to dictators. the greatest discoveries, inventions, and mistakes ever made. For curious stories, check out Dan Snow's history hit wherever you get your podcasts.
¶ Ethics of Metal Detecting
so do you think the portable antiquity scheme and the treasure act is a good thing that works i wonder whether some people think the temptation might be to just slip it in your pocket so many people have said to us and to me especially on facebook and not on the internet they've said Well, you must be mad. I'd have just kept that. But what's the point in just keeping it? The thing is, it weighs five grams. So it's less than 200 pounds worth of gold. So if you don't declare...
It's history. If you were to steal that and try and sell it on the black market, you would not get anything for it. They call it nighthawking that can go without permission onto farmland or any privately owned land and steal objects because that's what they're doing and make money from it is so naive it's untrue. the most responsible thing to do is declare it.
You'll benefit from it. If it goes into a museum, that's the first benefit that other people will be able to see it and other people will be able to share in the history, in our history, that it's been lost to the soil before you found it. So that's the most amazing thing, that it's been found. and being shared.
and it belongs to the crown you can't steal it's a criminal offence and you will go to jail if you try to do that i would never be so selfish to do that you do get a finder's fee but that's not the main reason why we do this you would never go into metal detecting thinking you were
going to make money because it's very very unlikely to happen yeah and we've never ever set out to think oh let's start metal detecting because we might make some money out of it that was never you'll be disappointed if that's why you're doing metal detecting we do it because we love the history We've actually got two other items going through the treasure trove process at the moment. Another one is a medieval gold brooch and it looks like a curtain ring.
So, you know, compared to the Little Gold Bible, it's very, very plain indeed. And is that one that Ian found, Buffy? Yeah, I did, actually. Yeah, very plain. Yeah, I do make the better finds. And when we get that back... We're actually going to give it straight to the landowner and he's going to gift it to the church. The curtain ring, this is what we're talking about. Yeah, the curtain ring. So...
I really don't understand people who really believe that they can make money out of metal detecting. It's not going to happen. It's very, very rarely happens. You're extremely lucky. We feel very, very, very lucky. this to have happened to us but i mean the piece that we've found this little gold book it's never been seen before and people are saying oh it looks like a pandora charm it does it does look like a pandora charm but
It is the only thing, as far as we know at the moment, until the academics look at it and confirm it, nobody else has ever seen anything like this from that time. Maybe modern days, yes, but not from that age. And Buffy was the first person.
to see that for 550 odd years yeah yeah been lying in the ground and you were the first person to see it after it had been lost which is amazing That's an incredible thought but I suppose as you say the value of those things isn't in the gold that's in it anymore the value is in the item that it is in the history that it has and the stories that it could tell.
Yeah, and people have been saying on the internet as well, there's all sorts of really, really lovely comments and contributions to it. And they're saying, you just... cannot understand in this day and age you cannot understand how important this piece must have been to the owner that they've placed their life in praying to this item possibly to bring religious protection or magical protection whichever way you want to look at it to
get them pregnant in the first place, which was so important as an aristocrat to have a child, well, most importantly, to have a son and to survive childbirth because 30 to 60% of women died in childbirth in those times. So they'd have been placed. their life in their well their hands figuratively speaking of this little gold book and I think it's drawn lots of comparisons
¶ The Mystery of the Lost Treasure
to the Middleham Jewel, which was found near Middleham Castle, so they're not too far away from Sheriff Hutton. And I've compared it to the Middleham Jewel. It looks strikingly similar to me. And it does beg the question, how... these two incredibly precious and valuable things that had religious significance as well as high monetary value how did they end up being lost
Do you have any thoughts? That's what we were saying. How careless are people? Were they purposely buried to hide them or did they lose them? We just don't know. But what were people doing with their possessions, throwing them around in fields? Yeah, it's quite incredible. Especially if they do have a connection, because obviously this is both areas that relate to particularly the Neville family over this period. And as we've said, you know, gets into Richard III.
You know, we can throw in Warwick the Kingmaker and his wife Anne Beecham, you know, the really famous Beecham-Warwick family. So there are some significant people who it could relate to. And if these jewels are connected in any kind of way... that they relate to the same family it would seem like losing one of them would be careless but to lose two of them would be downright disastrous and silly so
I mean, I've wondered whether there was some significance to them being buried. If they relate to childbirth, is it an act of thanks or grief? Maybe if it didn't go either way or were they buried? When the Reformation sweeps north, you know, these things become dangerous potentially, but if they have some kind of sentimental value and significance to the person that they don't want to throw away, were they buried to be recovered potentially at some point later?
as part of that or you know even if it relates to the Neville family and Richard III there's so much going on the Wars of the Roses could it have been a moment of crisis for that family at some point in the second half of the 15th century up to the end of Bosworth the Battle of Bosworth a moment of crisis where they've gone out and buried their goods to keep them safe.
Yeah, that's what people did at the time, isn't it? Yeah, I did wonder if it was to do with the Reformation when Henry VIII came along and said, right, Roman Catholics, you are not allowed to practice anymore and you're not allowed to pray to these idols and these things anymore.
so somebody may have gone out because it's so important to them buried it and so it wasn't found you wonder whether they might have felt like this was all a flash in the pan you know this would come along and then it would go away and i don't want to lose this precious thing to me that has lots of monetary value but has religious significance and perhaps if it was a charm that worked they wanted to keep it and they thought you know when this all blows over i can go and get it back
I don't want it to be melted down or repurposed or whatever else. So perhaps they thought this would all blow over, not realising that it'd be 500 odd years before Buffy would come along and pull it out of the ground again. Yeah, it really is going down a wormhole and you get completely lost in your imagination of what was going on. Well, we do know that it was all ancient forest in that area. Yeah, I was just trying to remember the name of the forest.
So somebody may have been walking along the forest line in the dark, dropped it. There's no lights. Yeah, there's no street lights. There's no torches. You can't get your smartphone out. No. So it may have been that or like you say, Bering.
it for deliberately buried or yeah yeah because it would be incredibly careless to lose such important items like that that have similar purposes as well you know the middle of jewel strongly relates to sort of childbirth and protection and things like that So two items that have the same kind of purpose for the owner to have been lost relatively close to each other is quite odd and striking, I think, if they were just accidentally lost and dropped.
¶ The Future of the Gold Book
So what happens now? What's the process? Do we have a coroner's inquiry into the treasure and what happens to it then?
We handed it in to the Yorkshire Museum where we were told that the academics were very excited to look at it and they would zap it and they would x-ray it and poke and prod it and decide what it was and that could be a quick process because it would be fast-tracked because everyone's so excited by it or the sheer volume of people that want to look at it could extend it it could take two years it could take longer we don't know how long it's going to take but they will make
their decision, what they think it is, and then from there it goes in front of a panel? Yeah, to be valued. And then it'll be offered to a museum for purchase. And we hope the Yorkshire Museum will take it. We hope that it will go with the Midland Jewel. If the association is right.
All the museums are open to bid on it, aren't they? Yeah, yeah. And if nobody can afford it or they decide they don't want it, then it gets returned. Yeah. And then it can be sold private. That would be the worst case scenario because we really want people to be able to see it. Yeah, yeah. Wow. I mean, you must just be in a complete daze at the moment with all of this going on. Definitely.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Still, I don't know about you, Ian, but I'm still struggling to actually believe it is as important as everyone says it is, even though we've done all the research and it all points to that. It's just... too wild isn't it because i just never expected this to happen like i said in the start and now it may possibly have happened i just i find it difficult to accept i think what i'm going to take away then is we need
¶ Teamwork and Lasting Impact
competitive metal detecting that gets Ian into a bad mood and your best metal detecting is done in gateways when you're angry yes I'm the team manager. I organise everything. I secure all the permissions. I book everything. Makes the sandwiches. I lead to the van to make sure she doesn't get lost. Yeah, it's true. I take her there.
And then she finds all the good stuff. Yeah, yeah. He does all the driving as well. Yeah, do all the... That's teamwork though, isn't it? That's teamwork. Yeah, no, yes, it's a great pleasure.
well fantastic thank you so much for joining us and i hope dave the dog is coping with the fireworks that have been going on a bit for you as well it's gone nice and quiet now fantastic well thank you so much i mean it's so exciting to think what we might discover about this wonderful artifact over the coming months and years and hopefully we'll all be able to go and visit it in a museum at some point very soon.
I do also quite like the little Wars of the Roses reference to Lancashire people heading off into Yorkshire to go treasure hunting. That appeals to my Wars of the Roses interest. Join Dr Kat Jarman on Tuesday for another brand new episode and don't forget to subscribe to Gone Medieval wherever you get your podcasts from and tell all of your friends and family that you've gone medieval.
While I've got you, I would like to recommend an episode of Not Just the Tudors, also from History Hit. It's entitled The Ottoman Renaissance, and it's a fascinating discussion of something that I studied at school, the Ottoman Empire, but which doesn't get as much attention as maybe it should. Susanna Lipscomb sets about putting that right in this episode. Anyway, I'd better let you go. I've been Matt Lewis and we've just gone medieval with History Hit.
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