It seems highly likely that the man buried in Sutton Hoo Mound 1 was a king. 'I’m saying that the kinds of people buried in those burials may have served in the Byzantine army; it’s quite ...
But large mounds like those found at Sutton Hoo were almost certainly the final resting places for Anglo-Saxon nobility such as King Rædwald. The Sutton Hoo discovery shows that the "Dark Ages ...
Storyteller: There once was a king ... Saxon art, metal-work and manuscripts does not suggest a ‘dark age’ at all. Archaeology is revealing new treasures, most famously with Sutton Hoo in ...
Called Sutton Hoo, the burial site was discovered almost ... Some suggested one or more of the graves could be the remains of a Byzantine king. The burial sites have been dated to approximately ...
Other research has suggested Sutton Hoo could be the resting place of an Anglo-Saxon King, potentially Raedwald, who ruled the kingdom of East Anglia. Sue Brunning, Curator of Early Medieval ...
The Sutton Hoo burial mounds did not contain items from ... It was discovered in 1939 and originally thought to be the resting place of a king who lived in the early 600s AD and was from the ...
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 ...
Sutton Hoo - first excavated by self-taught archaeologist Basil Brown in 1939 - is widely considered to be England's Valley of the Kings and the potential burial site of King Raedwald, a great ...
The famous helmet from the ship burial at Sutton Hoo in England may be evidence that ... worth recruiting," Gittos wrote in the study. King's College London historian and archaeologist Ken Dark ...
Sutton Hoo - first excavated by self-taught archaeologist Basil Brown in 1939 - is widely considered to be England's Valley of the Kings and the potential burial site of King Raedwald, a great king of ...