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A Search for a Lost Hammer Led to the Largest Cache of Roman Treasure Ever Found in Britain
Smithsonian ^ | January 9, 2018 | Lorraine Boissoneault

Posted on 01/18/2018 5:41:11 PM PST by SunkenCiv

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To: marktwain

As I (an American) understand it, the local coroner gets to determine if the treasure was lost or hidden. If lost, the find belongs to the finder. If hidden, it becomes “treasure trove” and the Crown (usually a local or national museum) gets first choice of the objects found. But the finder is paid full value for whatever the Crown takes. Anything left over belongs to the finder to deal with as he/she sees fit. Of course the finder may have to split the proceeds with the landowner.


21 posted on 01/18/2018 6:29:49 PM PST by hanamizu
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To: Cowboy Bob

Eyes? The whole thing looks like Hillary Clinton.

There is no way I would tattle about items found on my property. Course I could never sell it, but it is weird how they turn over everything.


22 posted on 01/18/2018 6:38:15 PM PST by madison10
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To: Rebelbase

Must be the box would have been preferred for the RC testing, and the rest of the stuff regarded as too precious to consume in the process.

[snip] The find was in such great condition that even fragments of textile and decorative bone were found, which had amazingly lasted for over 1,500 years! The hoard had been buried in a wooden box which had long since rotted away but archaeologists worked so carefully that they were still able to tell the way the objects had been packed... There were toiletry implements, which include toothpicks, small implements probably used to clean the ears or removing cosmetics from small containers. There is also a niello gilded pair of objects in the form of ibises which were used again as toothpicks. There are three other objects which probably contained brushes for cosmetics and creams. [/snip]

http://www.hoxne.net/history/hoard.html


23 posted on 01/18/2018 6:38:32 PM PST by SunkenCiv (www.tapatalk.com/groups/godsgravesglyphs/, forum.darwincentral.org, www.gopbriefingroom.com)
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To: Bobalu

That’s funny, it DOES look like President Trump.


24 posted on 01/18/2018 6:40:16 PM PST by madison10
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To: Bobalu

I hear you. My house is built on the rocky end of a ridge. Indians must have used the site as a hunting camp. It is littered with flint and obsidian flakes. Sometimes I find field-expedient blades.


25 posted on 01/18/2018 6:50:17 PM PST by jimtorr
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To: Bobalu

Uncanny resemblance !


26 posted on 01/18/2018 7:27:00 PM PST by Big Red Badger (UNSCANABLE in an IDIOCRACY!)
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To: Big Red Badger

27 posted on 01/18/2018 7:33:44 PM PST by Bobalu (12 diet Cokes and a fried chicken...)
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To: Eric in the Ozarks

You get fair market value for it though. If it’s common/known you can also keep it. A friend hunts (metal detecting) England just about every year and among seriously cool stuff he’s found and brought back is a small eagle from the top of a Roman standard.


28 posted on 01/18/2018 7:41:58 PM PST by Axenolith (Government blows, and that which governs least, blows least...)
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To: Bobalu

Causes me to remember:

I had just read a short article about Europeans and their collective opinion of us (US). I was struck by this line:

“...[Europeans regard Americans as] upstarts who have little history, experience or wisdom...”

Which led me to write the following:

All my time in Europe (mostly Germany) I came up against this assumption. What they entirely failed to realize, and often failed to recognize as true even after I told them, was that we are them.

+ We are that part of them that had the ambition to pack what we could carry, leave our homes in Bavaria and Sachsen-Anhalt and Alsace-Lorraine and Calabria and Norway and a myriad others, to make a new life in the New World, before and after its incorporation as a nation.

+ We are the second sons of the ruling houses who, disinherited by primogeniture and/or bankruptcy, left the palaces, manors and stately homes to seek our fortunes in honest labor.

+ We are the political and religious dissidents, and not a few rascals and cads, who were transported against our will to the American Colonies before the British discovered Australia.

Our history is theirs, tempered by the perspective of distance....

Our experience is theirs, modified, enlarged, and improved by our own....

Our wisdom is theirs, corrected by practical application to fresh circumstance....

They would do well to follow our example; this would become obvious if they would drop their pride long enough to witness how, in three hundred years (give or take), we have surpassed what they accomplished in three thousand.


29 posted on 01/18/2018 8:44:34 PM PST by ExGeeEye (For dark is the suede that mows like a harvest.)
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To: ExGeeEye

Well said Sir!

We are, in fact, the children of the best of them.

And thanks for your service there.. Ex GI :-)


30 posted on 01/18/2018 8:52:00 PM PST by Bobalu (12 diet Cokes and a fried chicken...)
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To: SunkenCiv

please add me to the ping list


31 posted on 01/18/2018 9:04:14 PM PST by heartwood (Someone has to play devil's advocate.)
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To: ExGeeEye

Very well said.


32 posted on 01/18/2018 9:35:37 PM PST by thecodont
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To: SunkenCiv

Pepper was imported into 5th Century Britain? Must have been ridiculously expensive.


33 posted on 01/19/2018 2:36:40 PM PST by colorado tanker
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To: colorado tanker

The Romans got around. During the Han Dynasty in China, there was diplomatic contact at least once, and at least one other attempt, plus there was loads of indirect trade with India as the middleman, as well as direct trade.

There’s at least one mosaic that includes the image of an orangutan, which is found on Sumatra, and wasn’t known again in Europe until modern times.


34 posted on 01/19/2018 11:43:08 PM PST by SunkenCiv (www.tapatalk.com/groups/godsgravesglyphs/, forum.darwincentral.org, www.gopbriefingroom.com)
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To: ExGeeEye

Perfect!


35 posted on 01/22/2018 3:51:47 PM PST by Godebert (CRUZ: Born in a foreign land to a foreign father.)
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