hoard - meaning and definition. What is hoard
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What (who) is hoard - definition

COLLECTION OF VALUABLE OBJECTS OR ARTIFACTS
Hoards; Founder's hoard; Trader's hoard; Votive hoard; Coin hoard; Cache (archaeology)
  • A hoard of silver coins, the latest about 1700 ([[British Museum]]).
  • [[Treasure of Villena]], 1000 BC, the biggest prehistoric gold hoard in Western Europe. Discovered in 1963.

hoard         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
HOARD
v. a.
Store (secretly), deposit, save, garner, husband, hive, accumulate, amass, treasure up, lay in, lay by, set by, lay up, lay away, hide away.
hoard         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
HOARD
¦ noun a store of money or valued objects.
?an amassed store of useful information.
¦ verb amass and hide or store away.
Derivatives
hoarder noun
Origin
OE hord (n.), hordian (v.), of Gmc origin.
Usage
The words hoard and horde are sometimes confused. A hoard is 'a secret stock or store', as in a hoard of treasure, while a horde is a disparaging word for 'a large group of people', as in hordes of greedy shareholders.
hoard         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
HOARD
(hoards, hoarding, hoarded)
1.
If you hoard things such as food or money, you save or store them, often in secret, because they are valuable or important to you.
They've begun to hoard food and gasoline and save their money...
Consumers did not spend and create jobs; they hoarded...
VERB: V n, V
hoarder (hoarders)
Most hoarders have favorite hiding places.
N-COUNT
2.
A hoard is a store of things that you have saved and that are valuable or important to you or you do not want other people to have.
The case involves a hoard of silver and jewels valued at up to $40m.
= cache
N-COUNT: oft N of n

Wikipedia

Hoard

A hoard or "wealth deposit" is an archaeological term for a collection of valuable objects or artifacts, sometimes purposely buried in the ground, in which case it is sometimes also known as a cache. This would usually be with the intention of later recovery by the hoarder; hoarders sometimes died or were unable to return for other reasons (forgetfulness or physical displacement from its location) before retrieving the hoard, and these surviving hoards might then be uncovered much later by metal detector hobbyists, members of the public, and archaeologists.

Hoards provide a useful method of providing dates for artifacts through association as they can usually be assumed to be contemporary (or at least assembled during a decade or two), and therefore used in creating chronologies. Hoards can also be considered an indicator of the relative degree of unrest in ancient societies. Thus conditions in 5th and 6th century Britain spurred the burial of hoards, of which the most famous are the Hoxne Hoard, Suffolk; the Mildenhall Treasure, the Fishpool Hoard, Nottinghamshire, the Water Newton hoard, Cambridgeshire, and the Cuerdale Hoard, Lancashire, all preserved in the British Museum.

Prudence Harper of the Metropolitan Museum of Art voiced some practical reservations about hoards at the time of the Soviet exhibition of Scythian gold in New York City in 1975. Writing of the so-called "Maikop treasure" (acquired from three separate sources by three museums early in the twentieth century, the Berliner Museen, the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, and the Metropolitan Museum, New York), Harper warned:

By the time "hoards" or "treasures" reach museums from the antiquities market, it often happens that miscellaneous objects varying in date and style have become attached to the original group.

Such "dealer's hoards" can be highly misleading, but better understanding of archaeology amongst collectors, museums and the general public is gradually making them less common and more easily identified.

Examples of use of hoard
1. Managements are choosing to hoard cash rather than invest.
2. The arrest is seen as a part of struggle for control over the vast cash hoard.
3. "I‘m delighted that such an important Viking hoard has been discovered in North Yorkshire.
4. They hoard everything and push the prices up." Surcharging A small crowd soon gathered around us.
5. The treasure is known as the Lydian Hoard or as the Karun Treasure.