Ellerby Area Hoard
The Ellerby Area Hoard
Materialgold
ceramic
Size266 gold coins
Created1727 (deposited)
Period/cultureGeorgian
Discovered2020
Ellerby, East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Present locationDistributed within private collections
IdentificationYORYM-18E848

The Ellerby Area Hoard or Ellerby Hoard is a hoard of 266 17th-18th century gold coins found in an manganese-mottled salt-glazed stoneware vessel in a house in Ellerby, East Riding of Yorkshire in 2019.[1][2]

Discovery and contents

The hoard was discovered during renovations of an 18th century property beneath the kitchen floor.[2] The 266 gold coins were found packed within a stoneware vessel tax-stamped to the reign of Queen Anne (1702-1714). The vessel was nearly complete, manganese-mottled salt-glazed and decorated with ridged geometric markings. There are coins of several different monarchs represented within the hoard: James VI and I (16031625, 34 coins), Charles I (16251649, 42 coins), Charles II (16601685, 25 coins), James II (16851688, 14 coins), William and Mary (16881694, 10 coins), William III (16951702, 25 coins), Anne (17021714, 31 coins), George I (17141727, 84 coins), and Joao V of Portugal (17061750, 1 coin). The latest coin in the hoard is a guinea of George I dating to 1727.[1] The coins would be worth approximately £100,000 in modern monetary values.[3]

Sale

The hoard met the stipulations of the Treasure Act 1996 and was declared Treasure but subsequently disclaimed.[1] The hoard was arranged for sale by Spink & Son at 16:00 on 7 October 2022.[4] The hoard was sold to private collectors for a total hammer price of £628,000 with a final purchase price including fees of £754,000.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "COIN HOARD (YORYM-18E84)". Portable Antiquities Scheme. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  2. 1 2 "Ellerby Hoard: The incredible story of the once in a generation historic find beneath a Yorkshire kitchen floor". Yorkshire Post. 10 September 2022. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  3. 1 2 "Ellerby: Gold coins found hidden under kitchen floor sell for £754,000". BBC News. 7 October 2022. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  4. A Remarkable Hoard of English Gold Coins (1610-1727). Spink & Son. 2022.
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