In the last article in this series, I looked at hoards found without the use of metal detectors, often discovered by labourers in the course of farming or building work. This time, the subject will be hoards found by metal detectorists. These days, metal detecting is an enormously popular leisure activity and hoards, often dispersed by agricultural activity, are frequently recovered.
That is one great difference between hoards found in the past and those discovered today. In the past, a hoard was usually recovered entire, still intact inside the pot or other container within which it had been concealed. Occasionally, that is the case today, and metal detectorists will find a hoard that has not been disturbed, such as the large Chew Valley hoard, a deposit of over 2,500 pennies…