We are in front of the little treasures or the "tesorillos" or Jewish accumulations of Briviesca. They are two silver sets, of great relevance whose procedence is the Jewry of Briviesca. The Jewry of Briviesca, a small village close to Burgos, supported Peter I through major inflows of money. Peter I "the Cruel", for some, Pedro I "the Vengeful" for others, who, let us say, was on the Jews side. Jews were, afterall, royal subjects under the King´s direct protection, during his wars, the encounters Pedro I maintained against his brother, Enrique II, I of the Trastamara dynasty. The Jewry of Briviesca has delivered him large amounts of money for this war to directly support Pedro I and they are aware of his defeat. They know Enrique II is getting closer, bulldozing jewrys on Castilian lands, and they know that when he arrives in Burgos, he is going to go straight to the Jewry of Briviesca to raze it, because, as I say, it is a relevant and wealthy jewry, that is strongly supporting the king. That is why the families produce the so-called hoards, concealments. That is, they take those objects that they considered to be of sentimental or monetary value, and they make a hole in their own houses, in their gardens and, let´s say, they hoard these objects. Enrique II actually entered the Jewry of Briviesca; it was actually razed to the ground, burnt down, and actually, there were no Jews left alive to come back and take the concealed objects. Thanks to this, over time, the works, the archaeology, we can find these hoards which tell us a lot about the life and customs of people. In this case we have the "tesorillo" number one, located at Briviesca, which is very important, because we know that comes from the Jewry, we know that it belonged to a Jewish family and the first thing we find is one of the most complete silver dishes having the silversmith´s hallmark, the first one to be identified in Burgos. Therefore, it is a plate made by goldsmiths from Burgos, and it is a plate belonging to the silverware used during the Sabbath, the silverware for Saturdays, for Jewish special celebrations. It is also very interesting because it has graffity engraved at the bottom with the text "Esto pertenece a la aljama de Villena"; ("This belongs to the "aljama" of Villena"). That is to say, it belonged to the Villena family. Next to the plate you will find the hoards of coins and we see a series of objects that, in some way, were especially valued by the person who concealed them. Pendant gold pieces or ornaments, which probably were part of clothes or horse trappings, made in gilded silver. We have a series of rings with the coat of arms of the family in silver with cabochons and gemstones. But, perhaps, the two most important pieces or most interestings are: the plate, of course, and this small object that you see here, which is named with the latin term "dentiscalpium". A dentiscalpium, made of silver, and has a ring which lets us infer it was worn hanging from a chain. It is an object for personal toilet. On one side it is used for nails cleaning, for teeth cleaning, and on the other side it has a tiny spoon for ear cleaning. It is also of great interest this piece, which is a small pendant silver piece with rests of hot enamel that have been lost and it shows a scene of a court lady in a garden. On the other hand, we have a second "tesorillo" [I´ll go this way]