Experts have identified the object discovered by Rowan as a Roman armilla bracelet dating back 2,000 years. In the Roman Empire, bracelets were typically worn by women as an indication of their social status. Men generally did not wear bracelets due to their association with femininity. However, there were exceptions for soldiers with exceptional bravery or merit. A Roman general would publicly award these individuals armilla bracelets; the soldiers wore them as badges of honor.

More info here: https://www.ancientpages.com/2024/04/15/young-boy-rare-ancient-roman-treasure-sussex-uk/

  • @Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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    153 months ago

    Did he have to hand it over? If so that sucks. The UK makes you give up anything you find, yet private collections are filled with artifacts. Rules for the rich I guess.

    • Որբունի
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      33 months ago

      Museums and auction houses are filled to the brim with stolen shit and looted stuff, so you might as well not report any finds and melt down everything. Which is how archeological finds become secrets and science suffers because States are parasitic entities that want to claim ownership of anything convenient for bullshit reasons.