The Melsonby Hoard, the largest collection of Iron Age metalwork ever found in Britain, may have been part of a memorial honoring the ancestors of a significant leader, according to a study published in the journal Antiquity in early March.
The study was published by Durham University Professor Tom Moore and the British Museum’s Dr. Sophia Adams.
The hoard was first discovered in 2021 near the ancient royal site at Stanwick, Yorkshire, by metal detector enthusiast Peter Heads. It was excavated a year later by archaeologists from Durham University, and dated roughly to around 35 BCE to 70 CE.
Due to its proximity to the Stanwick site, which was under the rule of Cartimandua, the 1st century CE queen of the Celtic Brigantes, researchers believe that the hoard may have been part of a funerary display honoring her ancestors.
Over 800 artifacts were found at the site, including 28 iron wheel-rims and U-shaped iron brackets, which researchers claim point to the presence of four-wheeled wagons on British soil 2,000 years ago.
Four-wheeled wagons are well-documented across Iron Age continental Europe, in France, Denmark, and Germany, but never before seen in Britain.
There is also clear evidence of the hoard’s destruction prior to its burial, researchers added in the study, noting that wagon tires were heated and bent out of shape and large boulders were thrown at the metalwork to smash it.
The collection's careful arrangement is indicative of a “noisy, symbolic acts of deliberate destruction," showing that the Melsonby Hoard was more than just a collection of abandoned valuables.
Other finds discovered within the Melsonby Hoard
Acording to Durham University, also found in the hoard were two vessels “intentionally placed upside down," an iron mirror, coral fragments, tube-shaped copper objects, a possible decorative handle carved from bone, six sets of ornate pony harnesses, and assorted weaponry.
One of the vessels, a large cauldron, was decorated with fish imagery in a Celtic-style pattern and capable of holding an estimated 35 liters.
The second vessel, with highly decorated shoulders similar to the ancient Greek lebes, was also found, decorated with human face masks and coral studs sourced from the Mediterranean Sea.
The weaponry discovered included iron socketed spear heads, as well as the boss and spine of a shield, similar to other weapons found in fourth to second century BCE Iron Age cemeteries in East Yorkshire.
The Melsonby Hoard received the Current Archaeology ‘Rescue Project of the Year’ award on February 28, and is set to go on display for the first time on May 15 at the Yorkshire Museum.