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Norrie's Law hoard: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 56°14′30″N 2°56′21″W / 56.2416°N 2.9393°W / 56.2416; -2.9393
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'''Norrie's Law hoard''' is a 7th-century [[Picts|Pictish]] [[silver]] [[hoard]] discovered in {{circa|1819}} at Balmain Farm, north of Largo Law, [[Upper Largo]], [[Fife]], [[Scotland]]. It was buried in a [[Bronze Age]] barrow. The hoard weighed about {{cvt|12.5|kg}} in total, including a large number of silver coins which were sold and melted down.
'''Norrie's Law hoard''' is a 7th-century [[Picts|Pictish]] [[silver]] [[hoard]] discovered in {{circa|1819}} at Balmain Farm, north of Largo Law, [[Upper Largo]], [[Fife]], [[Scotland]]. It was buried in a [[Bronze Age]] barrow. The hoard weighed about {{cvt|12.5|kg}} in total, including a large number of silver coins which were sold and melted down.


Lady Durham{{which|date=March 2019}} in the 1830s donated several silver items from the hoard to the [[National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland]].
Lady Durham{{which|date=March 2019}} in the 1830s donated several silver items from the hoard to the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland, now the [[National Museum of Scotland]], and they are usually on display in [[Edinburgh]].


The characteristic symbols on some of the silver jewellery items are clearly reminiscent of the Pictish symbols otherwise only known from image stones.
The characteristic symbols on some of the silver jewellery items are clearly reminiscent of the Pictish symbols otherwise only known from image stones.

Revision as of 15:35, 9 March 2020

56°14′30″N 2°56′21″W / 56.2416°N 2.9393°W / 56.2416; -2.9393

Silver plaque from the Norrie's Law hoard, Fife, with double disc and Z-rod symbol

Norrie's Law hoard is a 7th-century Pictish silver hoard discovered in c. 1819 at Balmain Farm, north of Largo Law, Upper Largo, Fife, Scotland. It was buried in a Bronze Age barrow. The hoard weighed about 12.5 kg (28 lb) in total, including a large number of silver coins which were sold and melted down.

Lady Durham[which?] in the 1830s donated several silver items from the hoard to the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland, now the National Museum of Scotland, and they are usually on display in Edinburgh.

The characteristic symbols on some of the silver jewellery items are clearly reminiscent of the Pictish symbols otherwise only known from image stones.

See also

References

  • James Graham-Campbell: Norrie's Law, Fife: on the nature and dating of the silver hoard. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, vol. 121, 1991, 241–259. [1]
  • James Graham-Campbell: Pictish Silver: Status and Symbol. In: H. M. Chadwick Memorial Lectures 13. Cambridge 2002.