Skip to content
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Archaeology & Discoveries
    • Historical Events
    • Artifacts & Treasures
    • Ancient Civilizations
    • Unexplained Phenomena
    • Mythology
  • Subscribe
© Copyright AllThatHistory - 2025
Theme by ThemeinProgress
Proudly powered by WordPress
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Archaeology & Discoveries
    • Historical Events
    • Artifacts & Treasures
    • Ancient Civilizations
    • Unexplained Phenomena
    • Mythology
  • Subscribe
AllThatHistory
  • You are here :
  • Home
  • Artifacts & Treasures
  • Curiouser and Curiouser: Iron Age Hoard found in Britain was Deliberately Burned
In understanding why this Iron Age hoard was deliberately destroyed, it is hoped that we will gain an insight into the strange world of Iron Age Britain. Source: Durham University.
Artifacts & Treasures

Curiouser and Curiouser: Iron Age Hoard found in Britain was Deliberately Burned

Allthathistory March 28, 2025

The island of Great Britain has a strange and unusual history, and part of the challenge is connecting the history we know with the landscape we see today. As more and more discoveries are made, the story only gets weirder.

We have stories of battles, kings of ancient myth. We know of invading armies and hear from continental accounts of a mysterious land of forests and mists, warlords and druids, great stone circles and enormous earthworks. 

And we see this evidence in the landscape even to this day. But the problem comes in putting all the pieces together. 

It is always hoped that new discoveries will shed light on an ancient past, but this is not always the case. A new find, a hoard near the Yorkshire village of Melsonby, is a perfect example of this proliferating confusion.

  • Carved Stone Age Turtle Reveals Ancient Middle East Religion
  • The Roots of Carnival? New Finds Suggest Seasonal Parties in Pre-Columbian Brazil
Read moreBezoar Stones, the Universal Antidote: More Than a Mistake?

The hoard, discovered by detectorist Peter Heads and excavated over three years by a team from Durham University, is one of the most significant such finds ever made. More than 800 artifacts have been uncovered, dating back around 2,000 years.

Iron-shod wheels have been found, probably from a wagon or possibly even a chariot. Great cauldrons and bowls were probably used for mixing wine. Elaborate bridle bits and pieces of horse harnesses decorated with Mediterranean coral and colored glass have been pulled from the earth.

A cauldron found in the Iron Age hoard. A CT scan has revealed decorative fish depicted on its base (Durham University)
A cauldron found in the Iron Age hoard. (Durham University)
A cauldron found in the Iron Age hoard. A CT scan has revealed decorative fish depicted on its base (Durham University)
A CT scan has revealed decorative fish depicted on its base (Durham University)

But what is strange about this discovery is that all the items appear to have been burned. This was not some funeral pyre, no human remains were found. So why did these ancient people destroy their most precious possessions?

For now we can only speculate. Professor Tom Moore, a British and European Iron Age specialist from Durham University’s Department of Archaeology theorizes that they may have been torched in a conspicuous display of wealth.

Read moreThe Baghdad Battery: History Rewritten or History Misunderstood?

“Whoever originally owned the material in this hoard was probably a part of a network of elites across Britain, into Europe and even the Roman world. The destruction of so many high-status objects, evident in this hoard, is also of a scale rarely seen in Iron Age Britain and demonstrates that the elites of northern Britain were just as powerful as their southern counterparts.”

Some of the artifacts found in the hoard, much of which has yet to be fully excavated (Durham University)
Some of the artifacts found in the hoard, much of which has yet to be fully excavated (Durham University)

But this just raises more questions. Who was there to witness this ceremonial destruction, who were the elites trying to impress? What strange ceremony took place here out in the wilds of northern Britain which left so much of value burned or broken?

For now there is still much to be done, but if we can piece this hoard back together there is much it can teach us about a lost era of British history. In understanding what happened here, we can perhaps bring the ancient peoples of this dark, misty island into the clear light of day.

Header Image: In understanding why this Iron Age hoard was deliberately destroyed, it is hoped that we will gain an insight into the strange world of Iron Age Britain. Source: Durham University.

You may also like

Museum Employee Steals 3,000-Year-Old Egyptian Pharaoh’s Bracelet, Sells for $4,000

Spanish Researchers Create First Complete 3D Map of Historic La Pileta Cave Using Advanced LiDAR

Revolutionary Laser Method Reveals Age of Chinese Dinosaur Eggs for First Time

Egyptian Archaeologists Uncover Historic Hieroglyphic Stone Second Only to Rosetta Stone

Bronze Celtic Warrior Found Among 40,000 Artifacts in Bavarian Excavations

Ancient Tablet Reveals Lost Sumerian Myth: Hero Fox Saving an Anunnaki God

Allthathistory
Written by Allthathistory

Tags: artifact, ceremony, chariot, Durham, United Kingdom, Yorkshire

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Ancient Rock Carvings Uncovered in Ecuador Point to Shared Amazonian Cultural Traditions
    Archaeologists have identified a panel containing approximately 30 ancient rock carvings in Santiago de Méndez canton, Morona Santiago province, marking
  • Stolen Hercules Fresco Finds Its Home After Decades in U.S. Collection
    Archaeologists at Pompeii have identified the original location of a looted fresco fragment depicting the infant Hercules strangling serpents, solving
  • Maya Medical Systems Used Living Organisms as Precision Surgical Tools
    Maya medical systems deployed living organisms as precision surgical tools centuries before germ theory existed. Recent archaeological evidence shows these
  • Ancient Rock Art in Texas-Mexico Borderlands Endured 4,000 Years
    Hunter-gatherers in what is now southwestern Texas and northern Mexico created rock art for more than 4,000 years, maintaining consistent
  • The Thermal Engineering Behind Tiwanaku’s Agricultural Success
    At nearly 3,850 meters above sea level, frost arrives almost nightly on Bolivia’s Altiplano. Modern visitors struggle to breathe. Yet
The Gnostic Gospels
Encounters at the Heart of the World: A History of the Mandan People
Substack Articles

Latest from AllThatHistory Weekly

The Silk Road’s Forgotten Travelers: Women, Merchants, and Diplomats History Ignored

The Silk Road’s Forgotten Travelers: Women, Merchants, and Diplomats History Ignored

The standard image of the Silk Road is male adventurers hauling silk and spices across deserts. New DNA and isotope analysis of Central Asian cemeteries is telling a different story: women traveled these routes in comparable numbers to men, traded independently, wrote letters from foreign cities, and served as diplomatic intermediaries between empires. A 1,700 year old letter from a…

Read More →
Did Aliens Build the Pyramids?

Did Aliens Build the Pyramids?

At 481 feet tall and built from roughly 2.3 million stone blocks, some weighing 80 tons, the Great Pyramid held the record as the tallest structure on Earth for nearly 4,000 years.

Read More →
The Phaistos Disk: The Undeciphered Message Nobody Can Agree On

The Phaistos Disk: The Undeciphered Message Nobody Can Agree On

In 1908, an Italian archaeologist named Luigi Pernier was excavating the Bronze Age palace of Phaistos on the island of Crete when he found something that has baffled researchers ever since.

Read More →
Why Did the Bronze Age Collapse? The Theory That Changes Everything

Why Did the Bronze Age Collapse? The Theory That Changes Everything

Around 1200 BCE, nearly every civilization in the Mediterranean collapsed within a generation. The Sea Peoples get the blame but new research points to something more interesting, and more unsettling.

Read More →
What Sank to the Bottom of a Swiss Lake 2,000 Years Ago

What Sank to the Bottom of a Swiss Lake 2,000 Years Ago

A Roman cargo just came up from the bottom of a Swiss lake. Plates stacked exactly as they were loaded 2,000 years ago. Two gladii, one still in its scabbard. Spanish olive oil. The ship is gone but the cargo is intact. This one is extraordinary.

Read More →
He Was Attacked by a Lion 6,200 Years Ago. His Community Kept Him Alive.

He Was Attacked by a Lion 6,200 Years Ago. His Community Kept Him Alive.

Near the Black Sea coast of eastern Bulgaria, in a Late Eneolithic cemetery known as Kozareva Mogila, or Goat Mound, archaeologists excavated a burial that has taken years to fully understand.

Read More →
❮
❯

Subscribe to receive our newest archaeology articles, long-form investigations, and historical insights directly in your inbox.

© Copyright AllThatHistory - 2025