San Francisco Chronicle

Lockdown leads to backyard archaeolog­ical discoverie­s

- By Jenny Gross Jenny Gross is a New York Times writer.

LONDON — Gardeners in Hampshire, a county in southeast England, were weeding their yard in April when they found 63 gold coins and one silver coin from King Henry VIII’s reign in the 16th century, with four of the coins inscribed with the initials of the king’s wives Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn and Jane Seymour.

The archaeolog­ical find was one of more than 47,000 in England and Wales that were reported this year, amid an increase in backyard gardening during coronaviru­s lockdowns, the British Museum said Wednesday.

In another discovery, in Milton Keynes, a town northwest of London, gardeners found 50 solid gold South African Krugerrand coins that were minted in the 1970s during apartheid.

The news of the archaeolog­ical finds came as the British government said last week that it planned to broaden its definition of what constitute­s a treasure so that more rare artifacts — not just ones made of gold or silver, or that were more than 300 years old — could be preserved for display in museums rather than sold to private collectors.

In Britain, many historical objects that are found and believed to be from the 18th century or earlier must by law be reported to local officials for review. If the object meets the government’s definition of treasure, national or local museums have the option to acquire it and pay a reward, equivalent to the market value of the object, that is split between the finder and the landowner.

Since 1997, the law has defined as treasure objects that are made of gold or silver and are more than 300 years old, from before mass production began with the Industrial Revolution.

But as the growing popularity of metal detecting as a hobby meant that more historical objects were being found, museums have missed out on items of archaeolog­ical significan­ce that did not fall within the law’s definition, including Bronze Age axes, Iron Age cauldrons, and medieval weapons and jewelry.

In 2017, 1,267 pieces went through the process in which a committee determines whether an item should be considered a treasure, up from 79 pieces in 1997.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States