And, furthermore, that the East Anglian ship graves of the early seventh century (Sutton Hoo 1 and 2) represent an elaboration of this common practice, related to political centralisation and Christianisation in the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. We also suggest that this high-status, indeed royal, ...
... 波特兰花瓶( Portland Vase) 萨腾胡船葬遗物( The Sutton Hoo Ship Burial) 路易斯西洋棋( The Lewis Ches…news.lvyou168.cn|基于16个网页 2. 萨顿胡船葬的头盔 萨顿胡船葬的头盔(The Sutton Hoo ship burial):源自公元7世纪早期,这个特别的头盔非常罕见。头盔表面有点缀着动物装 …trip.elong.com|...
The ten Byzantine silver bowls included amongst the grave goods interred in the chamber of the Mound 1 ship burial at Sutton Hoo remain one of the most puzzling features of this site. It has been suggested that these items, which lay separated from the rest of the silver in the burial ...
Through drone-mounted photogrammetry, we can build a fully immersive and interactive 3D model of the site. Alongside our filming of the Sutton Hoo Ship’s Company’s reconstruction, we’re thrilled to be involved in two wonderful projects linked to one of Britain’s most iconic archaeological ...
THE outbreak of war followed so closely on the gift to the nation of the antiquities from the Saxon ship-burial at Sutton Hoo, Suffolk, by the owner, Mrs. E. M. Pretty, which was announced on August 23, 1939, that there had been little opportunity for detailed examination of most of ...
Brunning’s post was written to commemorate the discovery of the Sutton Hoo ship burial, which took place eighty years ago in 1939. This discovery was monumental and was unprecedented in many ways, since it is one of the most intact burials that has been found in Europe. This ship – whi...
Made with gold, garnet and millefiore glass this Shoulder Clasp From the Sutton Hoo Ship Burial is oval in shape. There is gold, red and blue colors on the clasp. There are repeated patterns on the art piece. This clasp can be compiled together with a pin that is attached with a ...
The archaeological discovery at Sutton Hoo—a sensation depicted in the film 'The Dig'—is perhaps the last gasp of a lavish English medieval funerary tradition.
In real life, we found no record of a Sutton Hoo burial mound caving in on Basil Brown. Had anyone else attempted to dig up the mounds prior to Basil Brown? Yes. In Tudor times, gravediggers had attempted to dig up Mound 1 (the mound in which the Sutton Hoo burial ship was found)...
Belt Buckle, Sutton Hoo, early 7th century, gold, 13.2 x 5.6 cm © Trustees of the British Museum Beneath the mound was the imprint of a 27-metre-long ship. At its centre was a ruined burial chamber packed with treasures: Byzantine silverware, sumptuous gold jewelry, a lavish feasting ...