Mysterious Anglo-Saxon object discovered in Norfolk and it's left experts baffled​

Mysterious Anglo-Saxon object discovered in Norfolk and it's left experts baffled​

The latest weather forecast from the Met Office for GB News

GB News
George Bunn

By George Bunn


Published: 02/01/2024

- 20:58

Scientists said it is 'completely unlike' any of the other similar objects discovered in the region

Experts have been left baffled by a recently discovered mysterious Anglo-Saxon object.

The item that was "made by someone with a real eye for loveliness" has been uncovered in Norfolk.


The ornate silver item was found by a metal detectorist near Langham, a small village about 30 miles from Norwich.

It measured just 0.7 inch (19.4mm) in diameter and is believed to depict an animal, most likely a horse, looking over its shoulder.

The item

The object has a flat, circular top lined with straight sides - similar to a bottle top but much more ornate

ANDREW WILLIAMS/NORFOLK COUNTY COUNCIL

​Historian Helen Geake told the BBC: "It's so tiny and yet it was created just as carefully as something like a Bible or piece of jewellery.

"It has got a backward-looking animal, possibly a horse, that fills the space nicely and I love its colour.

"A lot of the time we don't see the colours of the past because clothes don't survive and enamels drop out of settings.'

She added that the elaborate lines were reminiscent of the famous religious Book Of Kells and that it most likely dates to the late 8th or early 9th century.

The item

Mysterious Anglo-Saxon object discovered in Norfolk and it's left experts baffled

ANDREW WILLIAMS/NORFOLK COUNTY COUNCIL

Professor of medieval history and archaeology at the University of Oxford John Blair said 'there are various possibilities' of what it might be.

He told MailOnline: "'My own best guess is that they are caps from the butt-ends of wooden knife handles, covering the hammered-over end of the blade tang,"

Dr Geake added: "It's a mysterious object and you can't say what kind of thing it's off at all.

"But it was made by someone with a real eye for loveliness."

Langham sign

The slightly crumpled 19.4mm (0.7in) diameter artefact was found by a metal detectorist near Langham, Norfolk.

WikiCommons

The spirals are also recognisable from the Lindisfarne Gospel, another famous manuscript produced around AD 715–720.

This suggests that the find has some kind of religious significance and may have been worn as jewellery.

However, the item doesn't look like something that would traditionally be worn around the neck.

Gold and silver necklaces were rare and worn by women of high ranking.

You may like