logo
Largest Iron Age gold coin hoard 'one of a kind'

Largest Iron Age gold coin hoard 'one of a kind'

Yahoo14-05-2025
A "one-of-a-kind" cache of 933 Iron Age gold coins whose finder was convicted of attempted theft is to go on permanent display close to where it was discovered.
The Great Baddow Hoard, which was found in 2020, is a "nationally significant" find because it is Britain's largest recorded Iron Age coin hoard, according to experts.
It was declared treasure by a coroner and has been acquired by the Museum of Chelmsford, Essex, after receiving a £250,000 National Lottery Heritage Fund grant.
Curator Claire Willetts said it "could have been intended as a tribute payment to Roman general Julius Caesar".
The hoard come from a time when Iron Age tribes first began minting their own coins using regional dies (metal stamps) and it was found with fragments of a possible container or vessel.
It is the first archaeological evidence of aggression between two neighbouring Iron Age tribes, Trinovantes and Catuvellauni, said the museum's curator, Claire Willetts.
"The hoard's discovery in what is traditionally considered Trinovantian territory at Great Baddow may indicate movement or influence from western tribal groups into the east, potentially aligning with accounts of upheaval during Caesar's second invasion of Britain in 54 BC," she said.
Previously, the only evidence of this was in Roman sources.
Essex finds liaison officer Lori Rogerson described it as "a nationally significant discovery".
"In the coming years, visitors seeing the hoard at the Museum of Chelmsford will be in awe at its size and gold content and they'll be led to ask questions such as, 'Who owned such a large stash of precious coins?' and, 'Why was it put in the ground, never to be returned to?'", she said.
Having remained in the earth for more than 2,000 years, a metal detectorist found the collection on private land, but he had not sought permission to detect there.
Shane Wood admitted the theft of 22 Staters and one quarter Stater, and failing to notify the coroner of the find under the Treasure Act 1996 at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court in April 2021.
As well as fines, he had his metal detector destroyed.
Having initially failed to declare the find under the Treasure Act, his actions meant the potential to understand its archaeological context was limited.
The British Museum's independent Treasure Valuation Committee recommended Wood should not receive a reward, so only the landowner was rewarded for the find.
No search can begin until permission has been given by the landowner
All finds belong to the landowner
Any find in England, Wales and Northern Ireland that is more than 300 years old, made of gold or silver, or found with gold or silver artefacts, could be treasure under the 1996 Treasure Act
These must be reported to the appropriate county finds liaison officer
Source: Portable Antiquities Scheme
Jennie Lardge, Chelmsford City Council's cabinet deputy for cultural services, said: "I hope many of our residents, especially those in Great Baddow, will feel as I do, an immense pride in this outstanding piece of Britain's history uncovered here in Chelmsford."
The city council, Friends of Chelmsford Museums, Essex Society for Archaeology and History, Essex Heritage Trust, Council for British Archaeology East, and Essex Numismatics Society were among those who also contributed funds so the museum could acquire the find.
Liz Bates, director of England, Midlands & East at the The National Lottery Heritage Fund, which provided the bulk of the funds, said it was pleased to support the acquisition of "this one-of-a-kind Iron Age hoard".
It will go on display at the museum in summer 2026.
Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Detectorist finds hoard of Roman silver coins
Anglo-Saxon pennies sold for thousands at auction
Roman hoard found on camping trip goes up for sale
Metal detector to be destroyed after coin theft
Museum of Chemsford
The British Museum
The National Lottery Heritage Fund
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

St. Anthony's Feast in North End warns of ticket, vendor scams
St. Anthony's Feast in North End warns of ticket, vendor scams

Boston Globe

time2 days ago

  • Boston Globe

St. Anthony's Feast in North End warns of ticket, vendor scams

The post noted that the feast, which is billed as the largest Italian street festival in New England, is free to enter, and tickets are not required. 'Please don't fall victim and pay someone for tickets,' the post read. Related : Advertisement Organizers also said that no vending space is available for this year's festival, meaning that any messages reaching out about vendors are likely fraudulent. Mike Bosco, a member of the feast's organizing committee, said by email the warning was issued 'out of an abundance of caution' after organizers were alerted Thursday of a social media account that was fraudulently soliciting vendors. Last year, organizers received reports of social media accounts trying to sell tickets to the feast, Bosco said. 'We are not aware of anyone actually purchasing fraudulent tickets either last year or this year,' he said, Advertisement St. Anthony's Feast hosts nearly 100 vendors every year, according to the event's website, selling traditional Italian American street food and pastries. The festival, held on Endicott, Thatcher, and North Margin Streets in the North End, from Aug. 29-31. It celebrates St. Anthony, a 13th-century friar known for preaching social justice, as well as St. Lucy, or Santa Lucia, a Sicilian woman killed during the Roman persecutions of the 4th century. The tradition was introduced to the North End by Italian immigrants from Montefalcione, a small town east of Naples. This year will mark the event's 106th anniversary. The festival draws more than 250,000 people, according to organizers, and will culminate in an hours-long procession of the Statue of Saint Anthony on Sunday. Camilo Fonseca can be reached at

Mistrial in Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm's money laundering trial
Mistrial in Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm's money laundering trial

Business Insider

time5 days ago

  • Business Insider

Mistrial in Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm's money laundering trial

Prosecutors say Tornado Cash was the preferred money-laundering tool for the world's gutsiest scammers and hackers who used the software to "clean" at least $450 million in stolen cryptocurrency. But on Wednesday, a federal jury in Manhattan was disbanded after it could not agree on whether Roman Storm, 36, the co-developer of Tornado Cash, was a money launderer. The three-and-a-half week trial ended with a partial mistrial after the jury said they could not agree on the two most serious charges: money laundering and violating international sanctions, each carrying potential sentences of 20 years in prison. He was found guilty only of conspiring to operate an unlicensed money-transmitting business and faces a potential maximum sentence of five years in prison. He was not taken into custody Wednesday despite prosecutors complaining he is a flight risk due to his ties to his native Russia and access to an estimated $16 million in ETH. Prosecutors did not immediately say if they would seek a retrial on the two hung counts, and a sentencing has not been set. "I think Mr. Storm has every intention to stay here and fight" the one count he was convicted on, US District Judge Katherine Polk Failla said in allowing Storm to remain free on $2 million bail. Prosecutors had called Tornado Cash "a giant washing machine." They said the Seattle-area software developer knowingly helped criminals launder $1 billion in dirty crypto, all the while pocketing millions in transaction fees. The defense had countered that Storm was merely a software developer, and that he had no control over how Tornado Storm — built for legitimate privacy purposes — was used. The software, accessible through the Ethereum blockchain, lets users deposit cryptocurrency into a common pool and then withdraw it days later. The process made it virtually impossible for law enforcement or anyone else to track who was putting crypto in and who was taking it out. But once the Tornado Storm software went live, it ran automatically and was out of Storm's hands, the defense had argued. "Roman had nothing to do with the hackers and scammers," defense lawyer Keri Curtis Axel told the jury in opening statements. "It's not a crime to make a useful thing that's misused by bad people," she said. "The government must prove that Roman had a criminal agreement with a criminal purpose, and it cannot." Prosecutors told jurors a very different story. Storm actively marketed to criminals who hoped to launder their stolen proceeds, they argued. They showed the jury screenshots of marketing materials from Storm's home computer. The images included rough drafts of T-shirt designs featuring the Tornado Cash buzzsaw-styled logo imposed on a washing machine. Jurors heard three weeks of testimony. Prosecutors called a 23-year-old admitted NFT scammer to the stand. He described exchanging soap emojis with his girlfriend as he used Tornado Cash to launder $1 million in 2022. "Washy washy," the girlfriend joked, according to a text chain shown to jurors. Victims took the stand to describe watching helplessly as their stolen crypto disappeared into Tornado Cash, including $196 million swiped by hackers from the cryptocurrency exchange BitMart. "Our company does not have the ability to effect any change or take any action," BitMart attorney Joseph B. Evans told jurors, reading from the email he got back after alerting Storm that BitMart investigators had traced the stolen crypto to Tornado Cash. Jurors also learned the basics of cryptocurrency and the how-tos of so-called cryptocurrency "mixers" like Tornado Cash. Users would deposit crypto in multiple rounded quantities, jurors were told by the young NFT scammer, Andre Marcus Quiddaoen Llacuna, who testified under a cooperation agreement. "You could deposit in increments of .1, one, 100, or 10," he said, referring to ETH, the cryptocurrency that's native to the Ethereum blockchain. "That way, it was harder to notice if anyone was pulling out the same amount later on," he explained. He testified it took him about 20 minutes to deposit, in anonymized chunks, the 356 ETH he had stolen from his swindled investors, an amount worth some $1.1 million. His deposits went into a shared "pool" of ETH. Tornado Cash generated a long, randomly-generated unique password that he used days later to withdraw the 356 ETH, again in increments of hundreds, tens, or ones. While he waited, other people were likewise making and retrieving similarly rounded deposits, he said. Tornado Cash collected a transaction fee each time this was done, jurors were told. Another government witness, an FBI cryptocurrency tracing expert named Joel Decapua, told jurors that between 2020 and 2022, criminals used Tornado Cash to launder $1 billion, the criminal proceeds from 16 major hacks and scams, each involving sums of more than $5 million. The money accounted for roughly half of Tornado Cash's volume for those years, the special agent testified. The largest Tornado Cash deposit came from the so-called Ronin hack, a March 2022 cryptocurrency heist that US and world officials attributed to the North Korea-linked Lazarus Group. The US Department of Treasury announced sanctions against the Lazarus Group in 2019, calling it a controlled entity of the North Korean government's primary intelligence bureau. (The UN issued similar sanctions in 2016.) The Treasury's sanctions were updated and strengthened on April 14, 2022, after the Ronin hack, essentially making it illegal for anyone in the US to touch that stolen money. "Guys, we are fucking done for," Storm told his colleagues soon after, according to a text shown to the jury. Storm, a Russian expat living in Auburn, Washington, was one of three founders of Tornado Cash. Codefendant Roman Semenov remains a fugitive. The third founder, Alexey Pertsev, is under house arrest in the Netherlands while appealing his conviction on money laundering there.

Family and colleagues mourn beloved Kyiv teacher killed in a Russian strike
Family and colleagues mourn beloved Kyiv teacher killed in a Russian strike

Associated Press

time5 days ago

  • Associated Press

Family and colleagues mourn beloved Kyiv teacher killed in a Russian strike

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Natalia Haiova was a beloved kindergarten teacher in Kyiv known for the artistic flair of her creations -- drawings, flower arrangements, decorations. Last week, she perished in a Russian strike on a nine-story building in the Svyatoshinsky district of the capital. The attack, which targeted multiple neighborhoods in Kyiv, claimed the lives of 31 people, including five children, making it the deadliest to hit the capital since the full-scale invasion. Haiova, 46, was killed along with her sons, Vladyslav, 21, and Roman, 17, and her brother Oleksandr Naralyk, 44. The family was crushed under rubble when their apartment building collapsed over their heads. On Tuesday, Haiova's friends and family came to pay their last respects before she and her sons and brother were laid to rest in a Kyiv cemetery. Nadia Kolisnyk, 56, the headmaster of the school where she worked, said that everyone would remember Haiova as a helpful and knowledgeable professional, as well as a creative spirit. 'You saw the beauty she created. All the flowers, the decorations — it was all her golden hands,' Kolisnyk said. Arthur Kulishenko, 22, a classmate of Vladyslav's, had gone to the scene of the attack and waited for his friend's remains to be found, he said. 'We knew he was under the rubble and just waited,' he said. 'There were just rocks. The building just crumbled there. It collapsed like a sliced cake.' Haiova had moved during the pandemic to the house which had belonged to her father. She found a job right away in the nearby kindergarten, said her sister Olena Stetsiuk, 46. When mass drone and missile attacks escalated on the capital in June, Stetsiuk, who lives in a different part of Kyiv, would message her sister and ask her how she was. Haiova would often respond that she was too tired to head to the basement to take shelter. But recent attacks had been so loud and scary she had usually made the decision to go. Stetsiuk remembers the last shopping trip she made with her sister. They needed to find black garments for a friend's funeral. 'We chose, walked around, laughed,' she said. 'And we chose this blouse with her. She said, take this one. And we went to my place. We sat, discussed it, and looked some more.' Stetsiuk wore the same blouse to her sister's funeral two weeks later.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store