The brooch was discovered on the
North Downs above the village of
Kingston, Kent on August 5, 1771 by the Reverend
Bryan Faussett (1720–1776), Rector of Kingston. Faussett's excavation of 308 graves revealed an early medieval cemetery. Constructed in gold, with garnet, shell and blue glass settings, the brooch was in excellent condition when it was discovered.
Faussett's notes at the time describe the brooch as “one of the most curious and, for its size, costly pieces of antiquity ever discovered in England.” The ownership of the brooch began with Bryan Faussett. It later passed to his grandson,
Godfrey Faussett (1781–1853), Professor of Divinity at the
University of Oxford. In August 1853 Godfrey Faussett's son Bryan offered his grandfather's collection of antiquities for sale to the
British Museum, only for it to be declined by the trustees. Some outcry was raised in archaeological circles without effect. In 1855, the collection, including the brooch, was sold to the
antiquarian and collector,
Joseph Mayer (1803–1886). Mayer donated the brooch, along with his entire collection, to the Liverpool Museum in 1867. ==See also==