The Sandur hoard of the Faroe Islands was found in Sandur in 1863 and consists of 98 silver coins, which were probably buried between 1070 and 1080. The hoard is the oldest and only coin hoard found on the archipelago.
The coin hoard from Sandur is interesting not only due to the age of the coins, but also due to their origin, because it indicates with which countries the Faroers already traded in the 11th century. It is generally assumed the Viking age ended on the Faroe Islands in 1035. In the following time period, the Faroe Islands came increasingly under the influence of Norway, which then led to the actual monetary system of the Faroe Islands.
Today the coins are located at the National Museum of the Faroe Islands (Faroese: Føroya Fornminnissavn) in Tórshavn and are among the main attractions there.
Find location and owner
The coins were found in 1863 purely by accident. Gravediggers were digging a grave in the cemetery of Sandur, which had to be particularly deep in order to bury the bodies of two plague victims.
The find location was at the spot where the altar of the first church of Sandur (the second church ever on the Faroe Island) stood. Today historians conjecture that this church was the private church of a wealthy farmer, since in the immediate neighborhood a Viking cemetery was excavated. It could be that this treasure belonged to the wealthy farmer and not to the church.
If the coins were from a wealthy farmer, the large number of coins from Germany point towards the export of Faroese wool there and/or to middlemen, who traded with these coins.
The following coins came from England :3 from Ethelred II (978 - 1013 and 1014–1016)9 from Canute the Great (1016–1035), one of which was counterfeit3 from Harold Harefoot (1035–1040)8 from Edward the Confessor (1042–1066)1 not further identifiable counterfeitOne coin from Ireland which couldn't be exactly dated, but is from ca. 1050From Denmark :2 from Canute III (1035–1042)1 from the period between 1050 and 10952 counterfeits17 coins were of Norwegian origin :1 from the co-reign of Magnus I and Harald III (1046–1047)2 from the time of Harald III (1047–1066)4 from the co-reign from Magnus II and Olaf III (1066–1069)10 not further datable coins, either from the above co-reign, or from the time of Olaf III (1069–1093)50 coin originated from Germany:1 from Conrad II (1024–1039)2 from Bruno III of Brunswick (1038–1057)1 from Teoderik of Lorraine (959 - 1032)1 from Bishop Eberhard I of Augsburg (1029–1047) with the likeness of Conrad II1 from Bishop Bernold von Utrecht (1027–1054)1 coin of uncertain origin of the same type, as the above named coin from Utrecht (today the Netherlands)1 from Breisach1 from Celle1 from Deventer (today the Netherlands)1 from Duisburg1 from Goslar1 from Hoya1 from Magdeburg1 from Remagen1 from Speyer1 from Tiel (today the Netherlands)1 from Würzburg29 others, which could not be classified (as of 1979)As well as one coin from Hungary from the time of Stephen I (997 - 1038)G.V.C. Young: From the Vikings to the Reformation. A Chronicle of the Faroe Islands up to 1538. Isle of Man: Shearwater Press, 1979ibid: Færøerne. Fra vikingetiden til reformationen. Kopenhagen: Rosenkilde og Bakker, 1982 (Danish translation, basis for the original German version of this article)