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- Q7547682 subject Q15295905.
- Q7547682 subject Q7007304.
- Q7547682 subject Q8259640.
- Q7547682 subject Q8260146.
- Q7547682 subject Q8681938.
- Q7547682 subject Q8691172.
- Q7547682 subject Q8871285.
- Q7547682 abstract "The Snettisham Jeweller's Hoard is a collection of Romano-British jewellery and raw materials, found during the construction of a house in the Norfolk village of Snettisham in 1985. The hoard is thought to be the working stock of a jeweller, buried in a single clay pot in around AD 155. The finds include the working tip of a quartz burnishing tool (its handle has not survived), partially or fully completed items of jewellery, and raw materials: mainly silver coins, scrap silver items and silver ingots, but also six pieces of scrap gold, and many engraved gemstones to be set in rings. The presence of scrap gold and silver and absence of base metals indicates that the jeweller dealt mainly with high-status customers.The 17.5 centimetres (6.9 in) high pot in which the hoard was found is local grey-ware, spherical with relatively narrow opening and base, with a capacity of around 1.6 litres (0.35 imp gal; 0.42 US gal). Some items - such as bracelets - had to be bent to fit through the opening. Within the pot were found:110 coins: 83 silver denarii and 27 bronze coins. 74 of the silver coins are from the third issue by Domitian (AD 81-96), one with a relatively high silver content. There are also some posthumous coins of the deified Empress Faustina I (dated to AD 154-5) which give a terminus post quem for the burial of the hoard. The silver coins are probably raw materials; the bronze coins may be the jeweller's own petty cash.117 engraved carnelian gemstones, of which only 7 are mounted in finger rings. Most have simple wheel-cut intaglio engravings with symbols of good luck, including deities such as Fortuna, Bonus Eventus and Ceres. Stylistic differences indicate that the gemstones were produced by at least three different engravers.A variety of completed rings, illustrating the range of variation available to a provincial jeweller, some set with gems, but many snake-rings, with a snake's head stamped in low relief at either end of a silver ribbon which would then be bent into shape.Snake-bracelets, like the snake-rings, produced by stamping with a hammer and dies.Silver chain necklaces with crescent pendants and wheel clasps, possibly representing the moon and the sun.Quartz burnishing tool; its handle has not survived, but traces of gold on the tool show that it was used to polish gold.Two rare scraps of Roman linen, one attached to a coin and another to a ring.The silver finds were covered in a layer of silver chloride corrosion, and some items including copper were covered with green copper carbonate verdigris.The finds are held by the British Museum.".
- Q7547682 thumbnail British_Museum_Snettisham_Jewellers_Hoard.jpg?width=300.
- Q7547682 wikiPageExternalLink snettisham_jewellers_hoard.aspx.
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- Q7547682 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=IiCLdgDpS2cC&pg=PA28.
- Q7547682 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=LY9rEvdEKkwC&pg=PA147.
- Q7547682 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=jt0WTwNOP_4C&pg=PA12.
- Q7547682 wikiPageExternalLink conserving_snettisham_hoard.aspx.
- Q7547682 wikiPageExternalLink snettisham_jewellers_hoard.aspx.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q1102542.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q1423.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q1426327.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q15295905.
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- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q161439.
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- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q194177.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q2142976.
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- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q2295839.
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- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q234734.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q2351119.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q32102.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q324369.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q409630.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q428855.
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- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q6373.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q7007304.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q781780.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q8259640.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q8260146.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q8681938.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q8691172.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q8871285.
- Q7547682 wikiPageWikiLink Q999768.
- Q7547682 comment "The Snettisham Jeweller's Hoard is a collection of Romano-British jewellery and raw materials, found during the construction of a house in the Norfolk village of Snettisham in 1985. The hoard is thought to be the working stock of a jeweller, buried in a single clay pot in around AD 155.".
- Q7547682 label "Snettisham Jeweller's Hoard".
- Q7547682 depiction British_Museum_Snettisham_Jewellers_Hoard.jpg.