[1] The hoard was discovered in 1747 in the village of Capheaton near Kirkwhelpington in Northumberland.
That which survived was bequeathed by the antiquary and philanthropist Richard Payne Knight to the British Museum in 1824.
The six objects that compose the treasure date from the 2nd/3rd centuries AD and depict a range of religious and mythological subjects.
They are unfortunately only fragments of highly decorated silver vessels they may have formed part of a temple treasure.
The subjects represented on the handles include the goddess Minerva above a temple, the deity Juno, below which is a seated figure of Mercury with the flanking figures of Bacchus and Ariadne below and six of the Twelve Labours of Hercules.