cranial weapon injuryAnglo-SaxonDoverTwo adult male skeletons from Buckland Dover, dated to the pagan Anglo-Saxon period, displayed evidence of cranial weapon injury. In one case (SK 348) the injury, probably inflicted by a sword, showed no evidence of healing. The other (SK 303b), possibly...
Annieis a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and has written four award-winning novels set in ‘Anglo-Saxon’ Mercia. She has contributed to fiction and nonfiction anthologies and written for various magazines. She has twice been a prize winner in the Mail on Sunday Novel Writing Competiti...
(1992b). Changing symbols in a changing society: The Anglo-Saxon weapon burial rite in the seventh century. In M. CARVER (Ed.), The age of Sutton Hoo (pp. 149-165). Woodbridge: Boydell.Harke H. (1992) "Changing symbols in a changing society: the Anglo-Saxon weapon burial rit...
The Anglo-saxon Weapon Names Treated Archaeologically And Etymologically...May Lansfield Keller