While Sutton Hoo yielded many artifacts, it wasn't until the 2003 discovery of the "Prittlewell Prince," an Anglo-Saxon nobleman buried in the Essex region east of London, that many of the Sutton ...
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 ...
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 ...
Called Sutton Hoo, the burial site was discovered almost ... Gittos has been studying artifacts found at the site for several years, as well as those found at other similar sites.
Pupils conclude their archaeological investigation of the Sutton Hoo site and consider what it ... However, just who the artefacts should belong to is yet to be determined. A special coroner's ...
For nearly 100 after its discovery, the Sutton Hoo burial site in Suffolk was assumed to be the resting place for a high-ranking royals. Out of about 20 burial mounds at the site, the most famous ...
The Sutton Hoo burial mounds did not contain items from ... The burials are a collection of Anglo-Saxon artefacts found in a ship burial in Sutton. It was discovered in 1939 and originally thought ...
He added that Sutton Hoo "always encouraged more research" around mysteries that still remained of the site and some artefacts found at the site could still be seen here by the public ...