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Finds from Detectingwales.com Rally 13 Roman, Medieval, etc

Welsh Neil

New member
As the title says this was the first Rally of 2010 and the troops were massed at a secret location somewhere between Caerwent and Chepstow. Lots of history around here and I am happy to report that we found a fair bit of it!

Well over 50 die hard Detectingwales members turned up, all itching to get out and into the fields. After the usual talk and the award of a Years Free Rallies going to Roman Ray for guessing the weight competition we were off!

The first find was literally within feet of the cars and fell to Benny from Hereford. Its a long way to drive and he was rewarded rightfully so with an Edward hamster in good nick.
[attachment 151775 Bennyshamout.JPG]

Next find of any note fell to me for a change in the form of some silver filigree work that has been hand etched. Probably off a walking can or riding crop - a bit battered but I'll take it. After finding this I bumped into Benny again who by now was the owner of a partifact from a Roman brooch. This was only 20 minutes in so the it looked like it was going to be a good day.

Next I bumped into my old mate and detecting buddy Mark sporting a George III sixpence - which turned out to be one of three found today.

Quite a few Roman grots were coming out and I must have seen about 8 or so belonging to Admin, Bob, Kiwi and a few other people. I then had a decenbt condition one from the reign of Claudius which bizzarely I found exactly where a group were have a chat after they moved off.

I was in the woodlands when I had a chat with a guy who asked me about a toggle he found. Upon seeing it my first thoughts were "thats no toggle mate - its a Roman ring!" He had cleaned it a bit so I am not sure its metal probably bronze, but looking at the photos I would get a second opinion my friend as it may well be of the precious metal we all dream about.

A lovely medieval buckle surfaced, quickly followed by a stunning Roman fibula found by The Doc/ It still has the pin intact, but is missing the pin - anice find in anyones book - well done Doc! Can anyone ID it for him!!!
[attachment 151776 Docsfibula.JPG]

Richard 16.5DD had an interesting item that his mate promptly snapped in two whilst trying to straighted - the verdicts out at the moment, but it has an age. Any ideas?

The day was quickly moving on when all at once everyone I spoke to seemed to have either a hmmered or a milled silver. there was a Henry short cross to Kasiter, another ham to Gadget, one to Beepy, and at least another four to various people. My brain was a tad pickled by now so I forget who found what.
[attachment 151780 Kaistercuthalf.JPG]
A cracking Hawking Ring turned up with a stone set into it and some etching around it. At least thats what we think it is. Anyone have any ideas. The stone reminds me of a yellow saphire -which are quite rare stones, as they are normally blue. I know a little about yellow saphires as I bought one for the wife last year! I may be miles out, but thats my guess.
[attachment 151777 Hawkingring.JPG]

the day was coming to a close and I still kept hearing about more hammies including a Lizzy penny and a sixpence and some silver milleds including two joeys, and Mark with a William III vitually blank sixpence. Unfortunatley I missed a few of these as for once I was detecting.

The find of the day in my opinion belongs to Ozzyhead (Jo} who was over the moon with a cracking 1700 William copper in stunning condition. Well done to her - its a real beauty

A big THANK YOU needs to go to Rob (TaffLaff} for getting the land once again. Without him we would all have spent the day at home more than likely. Well done Rob - you are invaluable mate!

Also thanks to Geoff for the Vision to start this website in what was a wilderness time in Welsh Detecting. We all owe you a huge thanks for the friendships we have formed. Lets face it without Detectingwales a lot of us would be complete strangers.

Thats it for now - apologies if I got names wrong or missed out finds, but I am well and truley shattered! Until the next one all I can say is "Happy Hunting"

Get comfy because here come the photos!

Neil
[attachment 151779 buckle.JPG]
 
More photos
[attachment 151781 Bobsromangrots.JPG]

[attachment 151782 KaisterHenryIII.JPG]

[attachment 151783 KaisterHenryIIIobverse.JPG]

[attachment 151784 Lasthamoftheday.JPG]

[attachment 151785 Lasthamoftheday2.JPG]

[attachment 151786 docsfibula2.JPG]
 
More photos including a Roman ring

[attachment 151787 Mark1820profile.JPG]

[attachment 151788 MarkGeorgeIIIsixpence.JPG]

[attachment 151789 Neilradiateprofile.JPG]

[attachment 151790 NeilromanradiateClaudius.JPG]

[attachment 151791 Romanring.JPG]

[attachment 151792 RomanRing2.JPG]
 
The end for now. Hope you enjoyed them.

Diolch yn fawr
Neil
www.Detectingwales.com

[attachment 151793 Ozzyheadbestcopper.JPG]

[attachment 151794 Ozzyheadcopperprofile.JPG]

[attachment 151795 Neilcopper.JPG]

[attachment 151796 Neilsilverinthesoil.JPG]

[attachment 151797 MarksWilliamIII.JPG]

[attachment 151798 Bennyshaminmud.JPG]
 
Wonderful rally with some excellent finds. That Roman fibular broach has great patina and that intact buckle is also very nice. I have no clue what that voided long cross penny (now a halfpenny) could be - possibly Continental? That Eddie hammered is very nice and flat with minimal clipping. That's the first and only hawking ring I have ever seen with a stone. It almost looks like a child's ring. Thank you for sharing the finds from the rally. Many of us in the States are frozen in but your finds help us to keep the detecting fires burning.
 
I double checked my postbox. Seems I didn't get an invite to the rally ????

Very cool. Thanks for the pics.


Rich (Utah)
 
Nice fibula, the ring looks gilded,some great milled,the Henry and Scottish cut half should clean up proper-finds to be proud of!
 
I have also never seen a Hawking Ring set with a stone. Its about the size of a pidgeon ring (maybe a tad bigger) and definately has a bit of an age to it. I am pretty sure it is a Hawking Ring as we found plenty of medieval coinage around the same field and the location was in a historically wealthy part of Wales.

A great find - thanks for the reply

Neil
 
You would be more than welcome to join us Rich! Although I guess its a bit of a drive!:lol:

All the Rallies we hold are open to members, so if any of you guys are ever heading to Wales, join Detectingwales.com for FREE and you are automatically welcome on any of our rallies for the price of just
 
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