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The E-Sylum: Volume 25, Number 45, November 6, 2022, Article 27

SWEDISH CACHE OF VIKING SILVER FOUND

Leon Saryan and Arthur Shippee passed along this article about a find of Viking silver in Sweden. Thanks. -Editor

  Swedish Cache of Viking Silver

A hoard of Viking silver, described as a once-in-a-lifetime discovery by onsite archeologists, has been unearthed in Täby, a municipality north of Stockholm.

As the Archaeologists, a team of specialists under contract from Sweden's National Historical Museums, dug beneath the decayed wooden floor of a building in a Viking Age settlement, they discovered a small ceramic pot. Inside lay eight neck rings, two arm rings, a finger ring, a pair of pearls, and 12 coin pendants deposited in a linen pouch.

The neck rings provoked particular excitement. Forged in the torque-style, a symbol of wealth and status for Viking men and women, the nearly 1,000-year-old rings were extraordinarily well-preserved despite having been made and deposited almost a thousand years ago, said Maria Lingström, the archeologist who removed them from the ground. They looked almost completely new.

Silver hoards are significant in many ways. They reflect that their owners were very wealthy and are proof of advanced craftsmanship, said Johan Anund the group's regional manager, but they also reflect ancient rituals and religion said , the excavation also revealed more than a thousand other artifacts

The hoard of coins evidences the international nature of commerce in Viking Age Scandinavia, and includes silver from England, Bohemia, Bavaria, as well as dirhams, a type of Arabic coinage. The collection makes up what the Archaeologists termed a perfect example of [the era's] far-reaching connections and blossoming trade.

Norman coin found in Sweden The cache also includes a 10th-century coin minted in Normandy, an area in northern France to which Vikings migrated in the early ninth-century, which had only ever previously been documented in an 18th-century book of drawings.

The artifacts have since been transferred to the Acta Konserveringscentrum, a conservatory company in Stockholm, to be cleaned and documented.

To read the complete article, see:
In a ‘Once-in-a-Lifetime' Discovery, Swedish Archaeologists Have Unearthed a Cache of Viking Silver That Still Looks Brand New (https://news.artnet.com/art-world/in-a-once-in-a-lifetime-discovery-swedish-archaeologists-unearth-a-cache-of-viking-silver-2202955)

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Wayne Homren, Editor

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