Two rare silver coins found in Denmark offer an unusual look at the relationship between Viking raiders and Christian England around the early 11th century. The small artifacts were originally created as religious objects meant to protect England from Viking attacks, but archaeological evidence shows the Vikings instead turned them into personal ornaments.
Gitte Tarnow Ingvardson with one of the coins. Credit: John Fhær Engedal Nissen, the National Museum of Denmark
The coins were recently uncovered by metal detectorists in northern and southern Jutland. Both belong to a rare English coin type minted in 1009 during the reign of King Æthelred II, often known as Æthelred the Unready. At the time, England faced repeated Viking invasions, raids, and demands for tribute.
In response, Æthelred introduced public fasting and acts of penance while also ordering the production of a special coin with strong Christian imagery. The design differed from standard English currency of the period, which usually showed the king’s portrait on one side and a cross on the other.
These unusual coins, known as “Lamb of God” or Agnus Dei coins, carried a much more symbolic design. The front shows a lamb pierced by a cross, representing the sacrifice of Christ. Beneath the lamb appears a tablet marked with the Greek letters alpha and omega, symbols of God as the beginning and the end. The reverse features a rising dove, an image linked to the Holy Spirit.
Photo of one of the coins, found in Northern Jutland. Credit: Søren Greve, the National Museum of Denmark
The protective purpose behind the coins did not seem to produce the hoped-for result. Viking attacks continued, and many English coins were carried away through raids, tribute payments, or trade. Instead of rejecting these heavily Christian objects, Vikings appear to have valued them for other reasons.
Archaeologists note that many Lamb of God coins found in Scandinavia include attached loops, suggesting they were modified to be worn as pendants, necklaces, or amulets. This pattern points to a cultural shift in how the objects were understood once they left England.
Only around 30 examples of these coins have been identified worldwide. Surprisingly, only four or five were found in England. Most known examples come from Scandinavia and the Baltic region, making the Danish finds especially important.
According to experts at the National Museum of Denmark, the coins also reflect a wider economic change during the Viking Age. Contact with England exposed Scandinavian rulers to a more organized monetary system. Over time, Viking societies increasingly adopted coin-based exchange instead of relying mainly on cut silver fragments for trade.
Photo of one of the coins, found in Northern Jutland. Credit: Søren Greve, the National Museum of Denmark
English influence later became visible in Danish coin production. Kings such as Cnut the Great, his son Harthacnut, and later Sweyn Estridsson produced coins inspired by English designs, including motifs similar to those seen on the Lamb of God type.
The newly discovered Danish coins connect several major historical developments in a single object. They link English royal responses to invasion, the spread of Christianity, Viking mobility across Europe, and the rise of organized coinage in Scandinavia.
Although the coins were created as spiritual protection against Viking armies, their later use tells a very different story. Objects meant to defend England from raiders ended up traveling north, where Vikings wore them as decorative items or protective charms of their own. The irony has made these small silver pieces one of the more unusual finds connected to Viking Age history.
More information: The National Museum of Denmark