Kent and Painter, 9; at the start of his "Late-Roman silver plate: a reply to Alan Cameron" in the Journal of Roman Archaeology 6, 1993, Kenneth Painter lists (before the discovery of the Sevso Treasure, which he implies should join the list) "the 5 surviving major hoards" of late Roman silver, of which four (Esquiline, Carthage, Mildenhall and the earlier Chaourse) are in the British Museum. The other was the Kaiseraugst Treasure in Augst, Switzerland, PDFArchivado el 24 de diciembre de 2013 en Wayback Machine.
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Kent and Painter, 9; at the start of his "Late-Roman silver plate: a reply to Alan Cameron" in the Journal of Roman Archaeology 6, 1993, Kenneth Painter lists (before the discovery of the Sevso Treasure, which he implies should join the list) "the 5 surviving major hoards" of late Roman silver, of which four (Esquiline, Carthage, Mildenhall and the earlier Chaourse) are in the British Museum. The other was the Kaiseraugst Treasure in Augst, Switzerland, PDFArchivado el 24 de diciembre de 2013 en Wayback Machine.