Treasures Buried Underfoot

Roman ring

 

 

The French brocante offers more than old things from someone's attic and more than boxes of disheveled junk. The French brocante is not just a place to find unbeatable prices for disregarded items or the chance to find an unbelievable Picasso. It is a living museum with touch-able history where you can be the digger in the archaeological site and take your finds home.

 

 

Roman artifacts

 

 

At the brocante, my French Husband and I met a dealer who collects Roman artifacts. The dealer has been collecting for years; he started selling not so long ago. His stand was full of rare, intriguing pieces… he freely shared his knowledge and stories. I became a sponge, soaking up every word. I must have asked two thousand questions that started with: "What is this?"

 

 

Roman coin

 

I admit I usually spend most of my time at the brocante looking for things that speak in muted colored romance, old things that have more than their fair share of age, brocante items that have little monetary value but rather tell a story, depict a feeling. I guess you could say I am a sucker for worn beauty. Uneven certainty in worn items strikes a balance with me.

 

 

Poppy fields provence

 

Old coins, especially Roman artifacts, the dealer at the brocante told me, are often found in fields where Roman roads traversed… he mentioned that when a field has recently toiled, bits and pieces from the past are brought to the surface.

Driving home, I looked at the poppy fields with new insight… Battles fought, lives lost, bits and pieces, stories, memories buried within… and red poppies bloom.

 

 

Roman artifacts provence

 

Maybe my new hunting ground should be in recently-toiled fields.

But I would pick flowers instead.

The brocante offers plenty without trespassing.

What is your newest find?



Comments

9 responses to “Treasures Buried Underfoot”

  1. I would love to own some of those treasures– coins mostly-they take up little to no room– you can touch them at will and make jewelry if so inclined….my new find is a French shop owner creator artist on etsy – I love her daily creations….. mixed media some portraiture and French vintage …what is not to love she loves the brocante too-

  2. We read some of Julius Caesar’s “Gallic Wars” in 10th grade, so I was really wowed when you took us walking on an old Roman road (“iter”) in Provence. It’s simply amazing to see some of the items the Romans left behind, coming to light more than two millennia later!

  3. Growing up on a farm in England we would often find fragments of old China after a field had been ploughed. Usually little pieces about an inch big. Most were worn away and most were in faded blues or yellows and white. I wish now we had kept all those pieces, they would have made the most incredible mosaic table, a story from centuries past, only we didn’t keep them, we were kids and we would just look at them and toss them aside!

  4. There are so many old things around. There’s a Visigoth cemetery near us, and some menhirs and ceremonial mounds. And then you can go back to prehistoric traces–we saw some in some nearby caves. And back further–dinosaur bones, plentiful just south of us.
    In Narbonne, the paving of the Roman road Via Domitia is on view. What’s fascinating is to see how far down it is–how much dust and dirt settled on top over the centuries.

  5. Jacklynn Lantry

    I’ve heard of people finding civil war relics in the southern USA, but the closest thing I can claim is the garbage pits around old houses in New England. People used to burn everything they could, put food scraps in compost piles and bury the rest out in the woods. What’s remarkable is how little they buried. They really did “recycle” back then. The pits are more sociological than archeological. You can find tins with old lithography or old bottles, but nothing like the artifacts you find in France. I remember seeing a sign in Avignon at what had been an ancient roman fountain. It was astonishing to see! It makes history so real.

  6. Teddee Grace

    Recently tilled fields in the Midwest part of the U.S. cough up mini balls from the Civil War and Native American arrowheads and other artifacts. What a thrill it would be to look for Roman bits.

  7. tammyCA

    I sometimes wish I had been an archeologist..I really like the idea of digging around for artifacts of history. When I was a kid we would go in our basement crawl space that was just earth & dig hoping to find Indian arrowheads..never found any. Some years ago while I was digging & toiling to plant flowers I hit something metal & pulled out an old iron shoe form that might’ve been what a shoe cobbler used..this was the Wild West.
    I’m always watching history & British antique shows & always surprised when somebody says they found an ancient Roman ring or something in the garden. The Roman Empire was vast & covered so many countries.

  8. What treasures! I love how antiques connect us to the past.

  9. Just finished a fascinating book on Roman Britain; the Empire was so vast, and movements so far reaching. A global time, really.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *