The Scotsman

Secrets of Viking-age hoard found in field set to be unwrapped in £1m research project

- By LUCINDA CAMERON newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Researcher­s will be able to discover more about the secrets of a Viking-age hoard found in a field after receiving a major grant towards a £1 million research project.

National Museums Scotland (NMS) will carry out the threeyear project, entitled "Unwrapping the Galloway Hoard", in partnershi­p with the University of Glasgow to examine the objects in detail.

The 10 th-century treasure trove, which was found by a metal detectoris­t in a field in Dumfries and Galloway in 2014 and acquired by NMS in 2017, will go on display in an exhibition next year.

The research will involve precise dating of the items and, it is hoped, identifica­tion of their places of origin, which are thought to range from Ireland to the Byzantine empire and perhaps beyond.

The Arts and Humanities Research Council has awarded a £791,293 grant for the project, with the remaining cost covered by NMS and the University of Glasgow.

Martin Goldberg, principal curator of medieval archaeolog­y and history at NMS and lead investigat­or on the project, said: "Most hoards are usually interprete­d as buried wealth, with the focus on events surroundin­g the moment of burial.

"The Galloway Hoard challenges this view and presents a rare opportunit­y to ask in much more detail about how, and why, people assembled and collected hoards during the Viking age.

"We've already discovered a great deal through the conservati­on work, and people will be able to see that in the forthcomin­g exhibition.

"However, this research project will enable us to go much further using scientific techniques and internatio­nal collaborat­ion."

Susanna Harris, lecturer in archaeolog­y at the University of Glasgow and co-investigat­or on the project, said as well as the silver familiar with most Viking-age hoards and the much rarer gold, the Galloway collection also features an "unpreceden­ted array" of other materials such as bronze, glass and rock crystal.

There is also the "outstandin­gly rare preservati­on of organic materials" such as wood, leather, wool, linen, and silk, she said. "Many objects are wrapped in textiles, including Scotland's earliest examples of silk, which could have travelled thousands of miles to reach Scotland," Ms Harris said.

"These types of wrappings rarely ever survive and are archaeolog­ical treasures in their own right.

"The unusual survival of organic material like textiles will allow us to apply a range of scientific techniques that usually aren't possible for the precious metals that tend to dominate treasure hoards."

The Galloway Hoard: Viking-age Treasure exhibition will open at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh on 19 February, and will then tour to Kirkcudbri­ght Galleries and Aberdeen Art Gallery.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom