Noonan's will sell the Bury St. Edmund's Hoard, the largest known hoard of Iron Age gold coins to be deposited during the reign of the Iron Age King Dubnovellaunos, on March 4. It was found by Professor and metal detector Tom Licence in 2024.
-Garrett
The largest known hoard of Iron Age gold coins to be deposited during the reign of the Iron
Age King Dubnovellaunos, who ruled the Trinovantes between 25BC – 10AD, will be offered
in an auction at Noonans Mayfair (16 Bolton Street) on Wednesday, March 4, 2026. The 16
coins will be sold individually and are expected to fetch in the region of £25,000.
Known as The Bury St Edmunds hoard, it was found in two parcels by Tom Licence, Professor
of Medieval History and Literature at the University of East Anglia, in a field near Bury. In
Autumn 2024, Tom, who is 46 years old, discovered 16 full gold Iron Age Staters and one quarter-Stater, and these were promptly reported to the Finds Liaison Officer and were
declared treasure. He returned to the site a few months later and found one more Stater.
Tom started metal detecting as a young boy but took a more serious interest in the hobby in
1994 as a teenager. While walking through Rye in East Sussex, he found a Charles I Rose
Farthing in a flower bed, which immediately captured his imagination. When Tom isn't busy
with his Academic work – he in an expert in Anglo-Saxon History and about to publish a book
on King Harold - he is out detecting alongside his trusty ‘Mandy' Manticore detector. From the
hoard, Tom and the landowner have chosen to keep a single Stater each and after splitting the
money with the landowner, Tom plans to use some of the money raised to support local
archaeological work in Suffolk.
As Tom explains: "The reason I went to this new field was because my niece was keen to go
metal detecting, so I wanted to find a suitable location to take her. It was when I was there
that I noticed that the field rose from a nearby stream in a gentle gradient and had dark silty
soil, which was in a perfect condition on a dry October day, so I decided to use my trusty
metal detector!
He continued: "Later that afternoon, I started to get signals and found two pieces of Viking
hack silver. I continued searching and was astounded to find a gold stater, and after changing
the settings and going up and down rows that I had marked out – I went into hunting mode
and found another six staters! When it got to sunset, I called the landowner and took the coins
to show him and his wife. Later that week, I returned to the field and found more coins –
making a total of 17 coins!"
He finishes: "I was born in Essex, but my family has roots in the Bury St Edmunds area, and I
like to imagine that the coins were buried by one of my ancestors!"
As Alice Cullen, Coin Specialist at Noonans said: "All of the Staters in the hoard are inscribed,
and they can be attributed to two figures: Addedomaros and Dubnovellaunos. In the catalogue
we follow the arrangement in Chris Rudd's Ancient British Coins and assign these leaders to
different tribes: the Catuvellauni and the Trinovantes respectively. As ever with British Iron Age numismatics, this simplicity masks a lot of hidden complexity. Addedomaros' kingdom appears
to have expanded to include much Trinovantian territory and it is possible that he was
Dubnovellaunos' father, an argument supported by stylistic links between their coinages.
Addedomaros was probably the first king north of the Thames to produce an inscribed coinage,
but beyond that we know frustratingly little about him."
Dubnovellaunos stater with a previously unrecorded die
She continues: "Dubnovellaunos ruled the Trinovantes, and at some point, held sway in Kent
as well; he is mentioned in the Emperor Augustus' Res Gestae as having sought refuge in Rome.
The findspot of this hoard, which sits a day's walk from Colchester to the south and Bury St
Edmunds to the north, is directly at the heart of Trinovantian territory. John Sills has suggested,
on account of die sequencing, that Bury St Edmunds Hoard was concealed during the reign of
Dubnovellaunos, for the hoard omits the ruler's last two issues. The chronology of the reigns
of both rulers is confusing and continues to be debated by scholars; the dates given in this
catalogue are again those used in Rudd's ABC."
In his discussion of microtopography Philip de Jersey (2014) notes that "among the hoards
deposited on the brow of a hill there appears to be a clear preference for burial on east-facing
slopes". This hoard fits that pattern perfectly, with coins discovered just below the crest of a
slope on the east-facing side, and no more coins were found to the north. Tom believes the
"morning sun illuminating the hillcrest and a spring rising at the same spot" is a combination
that could point to this hoard, and others like it, having a religious significance.
Addedomaros wheel stater
Among the highlights of the hoard are two coins that are Tom's particular favourites. These
are the Addedomaros wheel stater, which as John Sills notes, there is more of the legend visible
on that stater than on any other example, and it confirms the spelling of the name on that early
type, which was previously uncertain. It is estimated at £3,000-3,600 [lot 2013]; while the
Dubnovellaunos stater with a previously unrecorded die is expected to fetch £1,500-2,000 [lot
2009].
Wayne Homren, Editor
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