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Researchers have finally uncovered distant origin of 1,000-year-old urn found in Scotland

The vessel was found as part of the hoard uncovered a decade ago

Ryan McDougall
Monday 02 September 2024 08:50 BST
The Galloway hoard urn
The Galloway hoard urn

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Research has revealed the origins of a ā€œremarkableā€ lidded urn discovered 10 years ago in Scotland as part of a collection of ancient treasures.

The lidded vessel, which contained a number of items and is more than 1,000 years old, is part of the Galloway Hoard.

Now the urn has been found to be of west Asian origin.

It was found in 2014 wrapped in textiles, which themselves were considered an extremely rare survival.

The hoard is estimated to have been created around 900AD, and was discovered by excavators near Balmaghie in the historical county of Kirkcudbrightshire.

The Galloway Hoard vessel and the items discovered within. It is estimated to be around 1,100 years old. (National Museums Scotland/PA)
The Galloway Hoard vessel and the items discovered within. It is estimated to be around 1,100 years old. (National Museums Scotland/PA)

The textiles were studied and retained for further analysis, and laser cleaning has helped reveal further details of the vessel including crowns, fire altars, leopards and tigers.

The imagery is considered unusual in western Europe, with researchers stating it is associated with Zoroastrianism, the state religion of the Sasnian Empire in Iran, before Islam became the more widely practised faith during the 7th and 8th centuries.

New scientific analysis has confirmed the materials used to make the vessel originated in what is now central Iran.

Dr Martin Goldberg, from National Museums Scotland, said: ā€œWe had suspected from X-ray scanning the vessel that it may have originated somewhere in central or western Asia, but itā€™s only now that weā€™ve carefully conserved and analysed it that we can say this is definitively the case.

ā€œItā€™s further evidence of the cosmopolitan make-up of the Galloway Hoard. We now know that the Viking-age silver that makes up most of the hoard was melted down from coins and metalwork from early medieval England.

ā€œSome objects, like the lidded vessel, stood out from the rest and the scientific analysis now confirms this.

ā€œIt is incredible to imagine how the vessel made its journey halfway round the known world, from Iran to this distant corner of south-west Scotland.ā€

The lid of the Galloway Hoard vessel. The urn was discovered in 2014. (National Museums Scotland/PA)
The lid of the Galloway Hoard vessel. The urn was discovered in 2014. (National Museums Scotland/PA)

Dr Jane Kershaw, an expert on Viking-age silver from the University of Oxford, added: ā€œTaking tiny samples from both the vessel body and the niello ā€“ the black silver-sulphide inlays that outline the decoration ā€“ we assessed the provenance of the silver.

ā€œIt was immediately clear that the vessel was unlike any other silver contained in the hoard: instead, the results point to origins in the Sasanian Empire, what is today Iran.

ā€œElemental analysis using portable X-ray fluorescence revealed that the vessel is an alloy of silver and relatively pure copper, which is typical of Sasanian silver, but not contemporary European silver.

ā€œIn addition, the isotopes of the lead contained within the silver metal and niello match ore from Iran. We can even go so far as to say that the niello derives from the famous mine of Nakhlak in central Iran.

ā€œItā€™s fantastic to have scientific confirmation for the distant origins of this remarkable object.ā€

The vessel will go on display for the first time later this month as part of the British Museumā€™s forthcoming exhibition, Silk Roads, in London.

Other objects from the Galloway Hoard will go on long-term display at the National Museum of Scotland, in Edinburgh, while a portion will go on show at Kirkcudbright Galleries.

Dr Sue Brunning, from the British Museum, said: ā€œWeā€™re delighted that visitors to Silk Roads will be the first in the world to see this key object from the Galloway Hoard.

ā€œAmong its remarkable contents were Scotlandā€™s earliest recorded silk, and so it is a highly appropriate inclusion in the exhibition.

ā€œFor the first time it will be displayed alongside a similar vessel found in northern Britain and also used as a Viking-age treasure container, but the Galloway vessel is the only one confirmed as originating beyond Europe, in lands far to the east.

ā€œIt was, itself, a long-distance traveller on the Silk Roadsā€™ sprawling networks.ā€

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