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- Q925390 subject Q7154315.
- Q925390 subject Q8259341.
- Q925390 subject Q8387443.
- Q925390 subject Q8871260.
- Q925390 abstract "The Broighter Gold or more correctly, the Broighter Hoard, is a hoard of gold artefacts from the Iron Age of the 1st century BC that were found in 1896 by Tom Nicholl and James Morrow on farmland near Limavady, Northern Ireland. The hoard includes a 7-inch-long (18 cm) gold boat, a gold torc and bowl and some other jewellery. A design from the hoard has been used as an image on British one-pound coins and the gold ship featured in a design on the last Irish one-pound coins. The Broighter Collar and Broighter Ship also featured on definitive postage stamps of Ireland from 1990–1995. The National Museum of Ireland, who now hold the hoard, describe the torc as the "finest example of Irish La Tène goldworking". Replicas of the collection are kept at the Ulster Museum in Belfast.".
- Q925390 thumbnail Broighter_Gold,_Dublin,_October_2010_(02).JPG?width=300.
- Q925390 wikiPageExternalLink 1.
- Q925390 wikiPageExternalLink broighter_gold_simpson.htm.
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- Q925390 wikiPageWikiLink Q7154315.
- Q925390 wikiPageWikiLink Q8259341.
- Q925390 wikiPageWikiLink Q8387443.
- Q925390 wikiPageWikiLink Q8871260.
- Q925390 wikiPageWikiLink Q897.
- Q925390 comment "The Broighter Gold or more correctly, the Broighter Hoard, is a hoard of gold artefacts from the Iron Age of the 1st century BC that were found in 1896 by Tom Nicholl and James Morrow on farmland near Limavady, Northern Ireland. The hoard includes a 7-inch-long (18 cm) gold boat, a gold torc and bowl and some other jewellery. A design from the hoard has been used as an image on British one-pound coins and the gold ship featured in a design on the last Irish one-pound coins.".
- Q925390 label "Broighter Gold".
- Q925390 depiction Broighter_Gold,_Dublin,_October_2010_(02).JPG.