15th-Century English Coin Unearthed in Newfoundland

News November 10, 2021

SHARE:

NEWFOUNDLAND, CANADA—North Shore News reports that archaeologist William Gilbert and his colleagues at the Cupids Cove Plantation Provincial Historic Site uncovered a Henry VII half groat, a silver coin minted in Canterbury, England, between 1493 and 1499. The plantation was built in eastern Newfoundland in 1610 by John Guy, a merchant from Bristol. Previously, the oldest English coin found at the site had been an Elizabethan coin, minted in 1560 or 1561. To read about an early English colonial site in Newfoundland, go to "Off the Grid."

  • Features September/October 2021

    Secret Rites of Samothrace

    Reimagining the experience of initiation into an ancient Greek mystery cult

    Read Article
    (© American Excavations Samothrace)
  • Features September/October 2021

    Searching for the Fisher Kings

    In the waters of southern Florida, the creative Calusa people forged a mighty empire

    Read Article
    (Merald Clark)
  • Letter From Scotland September/October 2021

    Land of the Picts

    New excavations reveal the truth behind the legend of these fearsome northern warriors

    Read Article
    (Courtesy The Northern Picts Project)
  • Artifacts September/October 2021

    Late Medieval Ring

    Read Article
    (© Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales)