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 ...
Called Sutton Hoo, the burial site was discovered almost a century ago, and has since that time become the subject of much debate. Discovered in the late 1930s, Sutton Hoo (from the Old English ...
The famous Sutton Hoo burial site may have also included graves of soldiers recruited by a foreign army, new research has revealed. Helen Gittos, 50, an associate professor of early medieval ...
Unlike the Sutton Hoo graves, the Prittlewell grave had never been looted by grave robbers, and it was excavated with modern techniques, resulting in a precise date between 580 and 605.
Could the story of Suffolk's Sutton Hoo burial site near Woodbridge be turned on its head after an Oxford historian questioned whether it really is the last resting place of a king? Dr Helen ...
The famous Sutton Hoo burial site may have also included graves of soldiers recruited by a foreign army, new research has revealed. Helen Gittos, 50, an associate professor of early medieval history ...