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The E-Sylum: Volume 19, Number 28, July 10, 2016, Article 21

HOARD OF 8,000 ROMAN COINS DECLARED TREASURE

Coin hoard finds have a familiar flavor, with some metal detectorist stumbling upon a treasure after days, months or years of coming up empty. What's always different (and of more interest to us numismatists) are the coins themselves. This article doesn't have images of individual pieces, but this 3rd-century Roman hoard includes coins from Aurelian’s reign through Tetricus I and Tetricus II.

I found the article in The Explorator newsletter, a fascinating weekly collection of links to articles on archaeology and related topics. To subscribe to Explorator, send a blank email message to: Explorator-subscribe@yahoogroups.com. -Editor

Peover Superior Roman coin hoard METAL detecting enthusiast Ronald Lees was “ecstatic” when he unearthed the find of a lifetime in a field at Peover Superior.

The 62-year-old initially found dozens of Roman coins, which became a hoard of almost 7,800 after archaeologists helped reveal the full extent of the amazing discovery.

The bronze coins were produced in the third century, and the majority were found in a pot a few inches under the ground.

Mr Lees, from Altrincham, discovered the coins when he and friend Rick Parker made their fifth trawl of a field on a cold, wet winter’s day in January 2015.

At an inquest into the find at Macclesfield Town Hall on Wednesday, Alan Moore, deputy coroner for Cheshire, declared the coin hoard to be treasure.

Mr Moore read out a report by Richard Abdy from the British Museum.

In his report Mr Abdy said the coins date from AD 251 to 274, and are similar to the many Romano-British coin hoards buried in the aftermath of the breakaway Gallic Empire.

The empire was established in AD 260, he said, had held dominion over Britain and was reconquered by the legitimate ‘central’ Empire under Aurelian in AD 274.

The coins include ones from the earliest years of Aurelian’s reign, and the latest are those of Tetricus I, AD 271-4 and his young son Tetricus II, the last of the Gallic Emperors.

The greatest number, 1,902, are from the reign of Tetricus I, with 745 from his son’s reign.

There are 1,670 coins from the reign of Victorinus, AD 269-71, 899 from Gallienus’ reign, AD 260-8, 599 from the reign of Claudius II, AD 268-70, and 354 from Posthumus’ reign, AD 260-9.

To read the complete article, see:
Almost 8,000 Roman coins were unearthed in a field in Peover Superior (www.knutsfordguardian.co.uk/news/14604242.Almost_8_000
_Roman_coins_were_unearthed_in_a_field_in_Peover_Superior/)

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Wayne Homren, Editor

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