The Famous Staffordshire Hoard
The treasure was then sent for evaluation and the amount will be divided between Terry and Fred. The story of this treasure soon went viral in no time as soon it was made public. One website wrote every aspect of this discovery and told the readers about the details of the Staffordshire Hoard. In a very little time, the article was read by over 10 million people. There was more.
The Birmingham Museum And Art Gallery
Some of the artifacts from the Staffordshire Hoard were put on display at the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, where people stood for hours in long queues just for one glance of these treasures. Looking back in the past, Terry relives that one moment where people told something about Fred…
Warning!
Terry moved to the West Midlands and started following his passion as a hobby. It was him and the metal detector. This ever-ready amateur explorer loved searching the lands with one wish of finding something big once in his lifetime. “Five years before I dug on that field I was warned off it because I was told Fred would want all of anything that was found.”
The Law
Terry even said, Fred “should have been given all the money from the Hoard” but according to the law which states that money of such kind must be split if two parties are involved. People who read about the dispute gave some fun solutions to both of them.
We Can Help!
In one of the comments, a person named Chris wrote, “The free millions must be very stressful. As I’m such kind-hearted soul, please allow me to take the burden off your hands.” For us, we don’t care about the discovery and it is the discovery Terry made which might have helped the historians to solve some question of the past. Fortunately, the artifacts are in the museum.
There are still several mysteries that needs to get solved. All the artifacts state a new theory about the Staffordshire Hoard.
The Question Of 92 Swords
There were 92 swords in total which were found in the Staffordshire Hoard. These swords were believed to be of some noblemen’s troop back. The hoard could also symbolize the elite military gear. According to the will written in the tenth century, “to my royal lord as a heriot four armlets of … gold, and four swords and eight horses, four with trappings and four without, and four helmets and four coats-of-mail and eight spears and eight shields.” These swords could men anything but nothing can be said for sure.