Gold pendant bought by Buckinghamshire County Museum

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-beds-bucks-herts-32780374

Version 0 of 1.

A 500-year-old pendant worth more than £13,000 was saved from being sold as scrap gold after a jeweller recognised its value.

The jewellery, dating from 1450-1500, was found more than 30 years ago in a garden in Dorton, Buckinghamshire.

The owner had no idea of its value until trying to sell the pendant, when experts indentified it as medieval.

Buckinghamshire County Museum, which obtained grants to buy the jewellery, said it was an "extremely rare" find.

The gold pendant, with fine carving and traces of blue and white enamel, depicts two Christian religious images, and is thought to be a souvenir of a pilgrimage to Thomas Becket's tomb in Canterbury.

After its age was confirmed, the British Museum said it could be sold privately as it was found before the 1996 Treasure Act was passed.

Bucks County Museum was able to cover the whole £13,500 cost of buying the piece through grants from the Headley Trust, the V&A Purchase Grant Fund and the Patrons of the Museum.

Museum spokesman Brett Thorn said the find was "extremely rare" and a "beautiful and fascinating little piece of Bucks heritage".

"Apart from the incredible level of skill of the craftsman who made it, it also tells us something about how important religion was to the lives of the people at that time," he said.

"To realise the fact that they would invest so much time and wealth in a tiny souvenir which no-one else would ever see, perhaps hoping for a miraculous cure, helps us understand them better."

Thomas Becket and Canterbury

Source: Buckinghamshire County Museum