The team behind the traditional ship build have ambitions to sail it on the River Deben and beyond.
The famous helmet from the ship burial at Sutton Hoo in England may be evidence that Anglo-Saxon warriors fought as mercenaries for the Byzantine Empire in the sixth century, a new study finds.
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 ...
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 ...
Compelling new research from the University of Oxford argues that early medieval soldiers were recruited from Britain into ...
Reconstruction of the funerary boat found at Sutton Hoo. Credit: Gernot Keller / www.gernot-keller.com / Wikimedia Commons Sutton Hoo, one of England’s most iconic archaeological sites, has once again ...
In 1939 a series of mounds at Sutton Hoo in England revealed their astounding contents: the remains of an Anglo-Saxon funerary ship and a huge cache of seventh-century royal treasure. In southern ...
Paul Mortimer, who has created replicas of weapons found at Sutton Hoo, in Suffolk - where an Anglo-Saxon burial ship was discovered - said it probably attached a sword scabbard to a warrior's belt ...
THE Harwich Society’s winter programme of monthly talks will continue with a talk by the Sutton Hoo Ship's Company about the famous ...