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Ancient Norwegian gold jewellery found by man who bought metal detector to ‘get off the couch’

A Norwegian man who bought a metal detector as a new hobby has made the “gold find of a century.”

Initially, the amateur detective thought the device had reacted to chocolate money buried in the soil.

It turned out to be nine pendants, three rings and 10 gold pearls someone might have worn as fancy jewellery 1,500 years ago.

The rare find was made this summer by 51-year-old Erlend Bore on the southern island of Rennesoey, near the city of Stavanger.

Bore had bought his first metal detector earlier in the year after his doctor ordered him to get out instead of sitting on the couch.

Ole Madsen, director of the Archaeological Museum at the University of Stavanger, said that to find "so much gold at the same time is extremely unusual.”

In August, Bore began walking around the mountainous Rennesoey island with his metal detector.

A statement issued by the university said he first found some scrap, but later uncovered something that was "completely unreal” - the treasure weighing a little more than 100 grammes.

Under Norwegian law, objects from before 1537, and coins older than 1650, are considered state property and must be handed in.

Associate professor Håkon Reiersen with the archaeological museum said the gold pendants - flat, thin, single-sided gold medals called bracteates - date from around 500 AD.

This is the so-called Migration Period in Norway, between 400 and about 550, when there were widespread migrations in Europe.

The pendants and gold pearls were part of “a very showy necklace” that had been made by skilled jewellers and was worn by society’s most powerful, said Reiersen.

He added that “in Norway, no similar discovery has been made since the 19th century, and it is also a very unusual discovery in a Scandinavian context.”

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