The face of Anglo-Saxon England may have Danish origins. Ever since the Sutton Hoo ship burial and its wealth of artifacts were discovered in the late 1930s, the archaeological consensus has pointed ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Excavations and metal-detecting work at the site of a famous ship burial in Suffolk, England, have revealed missing pieces that ...
Archaeologists in Rendlesham, Suffolk, have uncovered a seventh-century settlement that may have been home to the craftspeople who made the treasures of nearby Sutton Hoo, widely considered the ...
An ancient stamp unearthed by a metal detectorist suggests the Sutton Hoo was actually made in Denmark, and not Sweden as previously thought. The Anglo-Saxon helmet, dated to the 7th century, is one ...
Reconstruction of the funerary boat found at Sutton Hoo. Credit: Gernot Keller / www.gernot-keller.com / Wikimedia Commons Sutton Hoo, one of England’s most iconic archaeological sites, has once again ...
Archaeologists search for artifacts at a dig in Rendlesham, where local craftsmen may have made the items found at the Sutton Hoo burial site. Suffolk County Council Archaeological Service Scientists ...
That's not the only impressive find inside the bucket either A MYSTERIOUS bucket found at Sutton Hoo in 1986 was stuffed with the remains of a dead VIP, archaeologists believe. This “bucket of death” ...
Archaeologists recently discovered the purpose of a mysterious 1,500-year-old bucket at one of England's most historic sites – and it wasn't pleasant. The National Trust released a statement about the ...
Hundreds of people gathered at Sutton Hoo to celebrate the anniversary of the famous ship being buried Hundreds of people visited the site of where an Anglo-Saxon ship was buried to celebrate its ...
An Anglo-Saxon Lyre, found as part of the Sutton Hoo medieval ship burial, has a cousin more than 2,400 miles away in Kazakhstan, according to archaeologists. A re-analysis of finds from Soviet-era ...
The Dig is the latest movie released by Netflix, which is a dramatic retelling of the Sutton Hoo archeological discovery of the late 1930s, which saw amateur archeologist Basil Brown (Ralph Fiennes) ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results