Abstract :
The Staffordshire Hoard was found by a metal detectorist on arable land in the parish of Ogley
Hay in south Staffordshire in July 2009, and was recovered by archaeologists from Staffordshire
County Council and Birmingham Archaeology. More than 3,940 pieces were retrieved, mostly of
gold or silver alloy and mostly representing what appear to be martial battle goods. The date of the
material has yet to be ascertained but the artefacts appear to range from the late sixth to the early
eighth centuries AD. The reasons for burial remain, as yet, largely unknown. The choice of
location, on the north-western spur of a prominent ridge, could have been intended to facilitate its
rediscovery, unless the locale held a symbolic significance within the wider landscape. The second
stage of fieldwork, in March 2010, identified a number of undated field boundaries and undated
palisade trenches perhaps associated with a small farmstead of pre- or post-Roman date, unlikely
to be associated with the hoard.