Hoby treasure


The Hoby treasure is the grave goods from a Roman Iron Age grave at Hoby on the island of Lolland in Denmark. It was discovered in 1920. The most famous part of the treasure is two Roman drinking cups with scenes from the Iliad.

Discovery and description

The grave was discovered in 1920 at Hoby on the Danish island of Lolland. It is assumed to be the grave of a chieftain and contained the remains of a middle-aged man buried in the first century AD. Along with the body was a rich amount of both indigenous and imported Roman goods. The objects were handed over to the National Museum of Denmark.
The most famous goods are a Roman tableware set, made in Italy around the beginning of the Common Era. It consists of a washing dish, a wine bucket with a scoop, a jug, tray and two drinking cups. The drinking cups stand out as the most famous part of the set. They weigh around one kilo each, are made of silver and show scenes from the Iliad by Homer. They are signed by the craftsman Cheirisophos and have engravings with the name Silius, who is assumed to be the original Roman owner of the objects. The other objects discovered in the grave are another cup made of silver, the bronze mountings from a missing drinking horn, a bronze knife, a bone pin, a casket made of wood, sheets of bronze and iron, a belt buckle, two gold rings, seven fibulae, three pottery vessels, and two hams.

Significance

The find is regarded as an example of an early Germanic prestige burial. It is significant for its attestation of interaction between Germanic and Roman culture. The tableware has been interpreted as part of an attempt by a local elite to manifest high status by imitating Roman drinking customs. The archeologist Knud Friis Johansen has written that their presence at the site might have resulted from a conscious Roman attempt to influence Germanic elites. The Silius whose name is on the cups might have been the commandant Gaius Silius, who was posted to Mainz in 14–21 AD. The cups could have been a direct or indirect gift from Gaius Silius to the man buried in the grave, although this cannot be proved.
The site was excavated again in 2012. This was done as part of a project aimed at studying the pre-Christian religion. In addition to Hoby, the project involved excavations at Toftegård and Tissø on Zealand, and Gudme on Funen.