Boys found rare silver treasure under church and kept it in a box for 60 years – until now
Two boys wanted to go treasure hunting in Norway. They thought the local church would be a good place to look and crawled under the building. Buried in the dirt, the boys discovered several silver coins.
That was in 1964.
Jan Gunnar Fugelsnes said he and his brother did not realize the significance of their find at the time. But a treasure is a treasure, so they packed the coins in a box and kept them.
Sixty years later, archaeologists have been able to see the boys’ find for the first time, the municipality of Møre og Romsdal said in a press release on March 6. Fugelsnes still lives in the area and told archaeologists about the coins after investigations began at Edøy Church, where the boys found the treasures.
The set of 14 silver coins turned out to be an incredibly rare, 600-year-old artifact, according to archaeologist Carl Fredrik Wahr-Hansen Vemmestad.
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Most of the coins were dated between 1300 and 1350, but one coin was dated between 1450 and 1481, officials said. Several coins were marked with crowns.
Only a handful of these types of coins have ever been found in central Norway, Vemmestad said in the press release. The age and location of the coins suggest that they were part of a burial mound under Edøy Church in the Middle Ages.
The area beneath the church was excavated by German troops during World War II and used as an ammunition depot, officials said.
Fugelsnes and his brother also found nine needles, three metal fittings and an amber bead under the church, he told the researchers.
Archaeologists identified the pearl as part of a prayer wreath and the 700-year-old pins as part of the deceased’s clothing.
Fugelsnes, 67, handed over the rare coins to archaeologists, Norwegian broadcaster NRK reported. The artifacts were sent to a museum for further analysis.
Edøya is an island in the county of Møre og Romsdal, about 400 kilometers northwest of Oslo.
Google Translate was used to translate the press release from the municipalities of Møre and Romsdal and the article from NRK.
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