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The Ringlemere Gold Cup is an ancient vessel from the Bronze Age, discovered in 2001 at Ringlemere Barrow near Sandwich in Kent, England.
This cup was crafted by stamping a solid piece of gold, with a handle made from a flat gold band attached using rivets. Although it suffered significant damage from plowing, it originally stood at a height of 14 centimeters and had corrugated walls. The design of the bowl resembles late Neolithic ceramic tumblers from around 2300 BC, adorned with corded pottery decoration, even though it belongs to a much later period.
The prevailing belief is that the cup was not intended as a burial object but rather served as a sacrificial offering, placed at the center of the mound sometime between 1700 and 1500 BC. No modern burials have been found at this site, although later Iron Age burials and a Saxon cemetery were discovered subsequently.
Only seven similar gold "cups with unstable handles" (the instability being due to the rounded bottom) have been unearthed in Europe, and they all date back to the period between 1700 and 1500 BC. The Ringlemere Bowl bears a resemblance to another British example, the Rillaton Gold Cup, discovered in Cornwall in 1837. Other examples of these cups are two from Germany, two from Switzerland, one that is now lost from Brittany, and an unattributed, possibly German specimen. There are also two other silver cups and two amber cups, along with several slate cups found in Britain, which share the same basic shape (as seen in the Hove's Amber Cup). These discoveries in Britain are primarily in the Wessex region, while on the continent, they are concentrated near the Rhine or Channel coast. This suggests a network of trade or connections between these regions, with the cups likely arriving fairly locally to their discovery sites as part of a broader cross-trade network.