A THEORY ON ROMAN GOLD IN BRITAIN Público Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 45, October 23, 2005, Article 12

    A THEORY ON ROMAN GOLD IN BRITAIN

    Arthur Shippee forwarded the following story which was
    noted in The Explorator newsletter:

    "More Roman gold is found in Britain than anywhere else
    - and now a Welsh academic has come up with an intriguing
    theory explaining why.

    Thousands of gold and silver artifacts from the Roman period,
    especially when the conquerors finally left these islands in the
    4th and 5th centuries.

    Dr Peter Guest, of Cardiff University's School of History and
    Archaeology, is the leading expert on the biggest ever Roman
    gold treasure discovered in Britain. In 1992, 15,000 gold and
    silver coins were found at Hoxne in Suffolk in 1992.

    In a lecture, Dr Guest is to propose that the large amounts of
    Roman gold and silver buried beneath our feet could be because
    something happened in the late Empire similar to the abolition
    of the gold standard in the 1930s."

    "Dr Guest explained that the gold mostly comes from a 50-year
    period towards the end of Roman occupation.

    He said, "Before then, Britain is not very special, but in that
    50-year phase, which coincides with the end of Roman control,
    lots of stuff is found."

    "We had been part of the Empire for 350 years by that time,
    which is a very long time.

    "It happened very suddenly and it might have been quite violent
    and one of the reasons for the huge amount of gold and silver
    is related to this separation."

    To read the complete article, see: Full Story

URL da fonte Data de publicação
  • 2005-10-23
Volume
  • 8

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