The Ringlemere gold cup is a Bronze Age vessel found in 2001 by a metal detectorist in a field near Sandwich in the English county of Kent.
Although badly crushed by plough damage it can be seen to be 14cm high with corrugated sides. Only five similar cups have been found in Europe, dating to the period between 1700 and 1500 BC. It is similar to the Rillaton gold cup found in Cornwall in the nineteenth century.
A programme of archaeological work funded by English Heritage was undertaken following the discovery which revealed that a Bronze Age barrow had stood at the site. It is thought that the cup was not a grave good however but a votive offering placed at the centre of the barrow independent of any inhumation. No contemporary burials have in fact been found at the site although later Iron Age ones have since been found.
Excavation work has continued at the site, funded by English Heritage, the BBC, the British Museum and the Kent Archaeological Society. This work has indicated that the now ploughed-away barrow was as high as 5m and had a diameter of more than 40m. The flat-bottomed ditch that surrounded it was 5-6m wide and 1.35m deep. Considerable evidence of much earlier Neolithic activity has now been found on the site including by far the largest assemblage of grooved ware in the county. Current theories now focus on the site having been significant long before and after the barrow being built and that the ditch may have been that of an older henge or, more likely, hengiform monument.
External links
Images of the cup (http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/compass/ixbin/goto?id=OBJ11887)
The Ringlemerebarrow is an archaeological site near Sandwich in the English county of Kent most famous as being the find site of the Ringlemeregoldcup.
The cup is a Bronze Age vessel found in 2001 by a metal detectorist.
It is similar to the Rillaton goldcup found in Cornwall in the nineteenth century.
Eleven centimetres high and weighing 100g, the cup was beaten out of a solid lump of 20-carat gold, embossed and buried in a round barrow close to the grave of an important chieftain around 1600BC.
The cup was almost identical to the Bronze Age Rillaton cup, found in Cornwall in 1837 alongside a skeleton and used by KingGeorge V to store his collar studs.
The cup is made from 10 per cent silver and at least 80 per cent gold.