—1,400-year-old structure discovered near Sutton Hoo in England may have been a pagan temple or cult house — Missing pieces of 6th-century Byzantine bucket finally found at Sutton Hoo ...
For almost a century, the Sutton Hoo burial site has offered a tantalising glimpse into Britain's ancient history. Of the incredible riches found at the site, the most impressive of all is the ...
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Archaeologists Just Discovered The Possible Remains Of A 1,400-Year-Old Pagan Temple In EnglandSutton Hoo features two royal Anglo-Saxon cemeteries ... “The possible temple, or cult house, provides rare and remarkable evidence for the practice at a royal site of the pre-Christian beliefs ...
The Suffolk County Council Archaeological Service conducted a large-scale survey of the fields at Rendlesham, a major settlement near Sutton Hoo, with the help of volunteer metal detectorists in ...
The couple made their home at Sutton Hoo for nearly nine years until Frank ... ghostly procession passing through the mounds near her house. Whatever the true cause, she decided in 1937 to ...
The face of Anglo-Saxon England may have Danish origins. Ever since the Sutton Hoo ship burial and its wealth of artifacts were discovered in the late 1930s, the archaeological consensus has ...
A manager at the world famous Sutton Hoo longship site has said it's "wonderful" that the origins of objects found at the site are still being debated after the helmet was linked to Denmark.
TÅSINGE, DENMARK—A statement released by the National Museum of Denmark suggests that the iconic Sutton Hoo helmet may have its origins in Denmark, and not Sweden, as previously thought.
Peter Pentz, a curator at the National Museum of Denmark, sees many similarites between the stamp and the Sutton Hoo helmet. John Fhær Engedal Nissen / The National Museum of Denmark Two years ...
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