Ashdon Hoard
{{short description|Viking-era coins found in Essex}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox artifact|name=Ashdon Hoard|material=silver|period=Viking Age|size=71 silver pennies|writing=|created=|discovered=Parish of Ashdon, Essex, 1984|location=various|}}The Ashdon Hoard is a hoard of Viking Age coins.{{Cite journal|last=Blackburn|first=Mark|date=1989|title=The Ashdon (Essex) Hoard and the Currency of the Southern Danelaw in the Late Ninth Century|url=https://www.britnumsoc.org/publications/Digital%20BNJ/pdfs/1989_BNJ_59_4.pdf|journal=British Numismatic Journal|volume=59|pages=13–38}} It was found in the parish of Ashdon in Essex and has been dated to c.895, providing the latest evidence for a bullion economy in East Anglia.{{Cite book|last=McLeod|first=Shane|title=The Beginning of Scandinavian Settlement in England: The Viking 'Great Army' and Early Settlers, c.865-900|publisher=Brepols|year=2014|isbn=978-2-503-54556-1|location=Turnhout|pages=231|oclc=865492481}} The hoard consists of 71 silver pennies. These include: 29 pennies of Alfred the Great, five pennies of Guthrum, one penny of Guthred, three pennies of Charles the Bald, one penny of Odo of France and 32 pennies of uncertain mint. The hoard is one of the earliest archaeological examples of pecking, and evidence that Carolingian coins were pecked in England.{{Cite book|last=Graham-Campbell|first=James|title=Silver Economy in the Viking Age|publisher=Left Coast Press|others=Williams, Gareth, 1969-|year=2007|isbn=978-1-59874-792-8|editor-last=Williams|editor-first=Gareth|location=Walnut Creek|pages=197|oclc=781309845}}{{Cite book|title=Silver Economies, Monetisation and Society in Scandinavia, AD 800-1100|publisher=Aarhus University|others=Graham-Campbell, James. Sindbæk, Søren M. Williams, Gareth.|year=2011|isbn=978-87-7934-585-0|location=Aarhus|pages=297|oclc=753634927}}{{Cite book|title=Early Medieval Monetary History: Studies in Memory of Mark Blackburn|publisher=Taylor & Francis|others=Naismith, Rory. Allen, Martin. Screen, Elina.|year=2014|isbn=978-1-351-94253-9|location=Abingdon|pages=26, 437|oclc=965444227}} At least one of the Carolingian coins in the hoard is an Anglo-Scandinavian imitation. The hoard contains the only example of a coin minted for Guthred.
Discovery and acquisition
The hoard was found by metal detectorist Bob Spall, in the parish of Ashdon near the hamlet Steventon End. He returned to the site between March and October 1984 on 16 separate occasions after detecting a few coin fragments in the mud in a woodland known as Home Wood. Twelve coins were recovered intact, and the rest were reconstructed from 102 metal fragments. The coins are now part of the Fitzwilliam Museum collection, save for four coins in the British Museum and two in the Saffron Walden museum.