Since its discovery in 1939, archaeologists have pointed to Sweden as the source of Sutton Hoo's haul. A Danish stamp says ...
Small decorative details on an iconic helmet belonging to “Britain’s Tutankhamen” could revise our understanding of early ...
These martial artifacts, in turn, suggested that the man interred in the ship burial at Sutton Hoo — possibly the early Anglo-Saxon king Raedwald — had brought back Byzantine armor after ...
One year ago today, it was reported that a mixed hoard of early medieval silver artefacts discovered by a metal detectorist in Cumbria ...
“The top layer was a parcel of silver bullion and a rare Anglo-Saxon cross ... considered the “richest collection” of Viking-age artifacts ever found in Britain or Ireland, according ...
These artefacts suggested Scandinavian links ... Bede's World - Provides a fascinating insight into Christian life in Anglo-Saxon England just before the Viking Age. Jorvik Centre - Explores ...
Where did the Sutton Hoo helmet come from? Archaeologists have long agreed that the iconic Anglo-Saxon artifact was likely ...
Examining the artifacts, they concluded that the settlement was not Viking, as first assumed, but Anglo-Saxon. The significance of Sutton Hoo was instantly recognized. The largest Anglo-Saxon ship ...
Pupils take on the role of young archaeologists to explore the burial mounds at Sutton Hoo and how one of these yielded the greatest find of Anglo-Saxon artefacts ever made. The pupils then ...