No Account? Subscribe today!
  • Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Auto width resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
Home arrow Features arrow Timeline arrow AD 700 - Sutton Hoo
AD 700 - Sutton Hoo
Article Index
AD 700 - Sutton Hoo
The magnificent treasure
The excavations
Visiting
A new cemetery?

 

The magnificent treasure in the British Museum

The Sutton Hoo burial forms one of the greatest treasures of the British Museum. Here we see a few of the most spectacular objects were found in the burial chamber that had been constructed at the centre of the ship.

Image

 

 

 

The helmet has become a symbol of the Sutton Hoo burial; yet it survived as a mass of small pieces, and was only reconstructed after years of painstaking work in the British Museum Laboratory.

Photo: British Museum

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At the centre of the chamber was presumably the body - though as the soil was so acid, it had not survived. Around the body were the most personal treasures. Bellow is the great 'purse lid' with elaborate gold decorations on the outside. The purse was probably attached to a wide leather belt by the three hinges at the top and fastened by the sliding catch at the bottom. The purse contained 37 gold coins, dated to around AD 625.  Left. One of the buckles that fastened the king's belt, made of gold, inlaid with red garnets

Image              Image

 


The burial was accompanied by numerous exotic items - this set of silver bowls come from the Byzantine world.

Image

 

This hanging bowl, by contrast, is commonly considered to be 'Celtic'. The red roundels are decorated with Celtic swirls, typical of Celtic art from the Iron Age.

Image

 

Some of the weapons buried with the dead man

 

Image              Image

Left. This ring, surmounted by a stag, is thought to have been set at the top of a whetstone: the whole is generally interpreted as a sceptre, an emblem of royal authority.

Right. The great shield, found up against the wall of the burial chamber. The actual shield seen here is a reconstruction; however the central boss, and the various strips of metal that decorated the shield, are the originals.

 

 

These are but a few of the treasures to be seen in the British Museum

 


 
  • Current Archaeology

     CA 226

    • Fylingdales Moor: a lost landscape rises from the ashes
    • Fortress Isca: the mighty Roman garrison
    • Caerwent: Roman centre of the Silures
    • Lime Street: London style c.AD 150
  • World Archaeology

    CWA 31

    CWA 32

    • Theatre of Excess: Clunia in Spain, a Roman failure, an archaeological marvel
    • Europe's first farmers:  Neolithic burials in the Czech Republic
    • Journey to the Dead: Viking boat burial in Iceland
    • Archaeology in Anatolia: 60 years of British archaeology in Turkey
 

Subscribe now!

NEW SUBSCRIPTIONS
Click on the links below to find out our latest special offers, and subscribe securely online

Subscribe to Current Archaeology
Subscribe to Current WORLD Archaeology
Subscribe to BOTH magazines

Or RENEW your subscription to: Current Archaeology / Current WORLD Archaeology / BOTH

Archaeology Festival

The Archaeology Festival - Current Archaeology is pleased to once again bring you the best of British archaeology at home and abroad.
Tickets now available! 

 
The Traveller is the official sponsor and travel partner

Opinion

What takes priority when housing and exhibiting archaeological collections?
 

The editors' blog

Hadrian

Image A new exhibition on Hadrian has just opened at the British Museum. At the same time, an exhibition on Skeletons has opened at the Wellcome Collections. Current Archaeology has visited them both. We report back

Read more...
 

Visit our timeline of British Archaeology


Notice: Undefined variable: thumb_img in /home/fhlinux-script/a/archaeology.co.uk/user/htdocs/modules/mod_article_thumbnails.php on line 35
Before the conquest of Wales by Edward I in 1283, the Welsh Kingdoms were flourishing. Yet archaeologically, little is known of this period. There are 'native' Welsh castles, but these are late and peripheral: the centre of Welsh culture lay in the royal courts - the 'llys' (pronounced "leese"). For the first time, one of these llysoed is now being excavated at Rhosyr.

Problems logging on?

Click here for help logging on

Fieldwork search

Search for Digs - powered by I Love the Past

Quick Search by area: Scotland | Wales |North West | North East | Yorkshire | West Midlands | East Midlands | Eastern | London | South East | South West | Ireland & IoM | WORLD-WIDE