During the Covid-19 pandemic, Dr Gittos examined distribution maps of copper items ... royal kings of the region. Sutton Hoo - first excavated by self-taught archaeologist Basil Brown in 1939 - is ...
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 ...
Helen Gittos, a professor of medieval history at Oxford University, in the U.K., has developed a new theory regarding the ...
Sutton Hoo, located near the North Sea in Suffolk, was first uncovered in the late 1930s. Named after Old English words ...
Barbara Wagstaff, left, and Mercie Lack, right, photographed the excavation site near Woodbridge on the eve of World War Two A collection of photos from the 1939 excavation of Sutton Hoo have been ...
The remains of the Sutton Hoo warrior's helmet are at the British Museum, with the pieces mounted on a model showing the full shape of the headwear "Mysterious features" found during a survey of ...
The first episode of a two-part drama in which children become archaeologists to explore what we can find out about the Anglo-Saxons from the archaeological discovery at Sutton Hoo in Suffolk.
Dr Helen Gittos has offered a different way of looking at those who were buried at Sutton Hoo During the Covid-19 pandemic, Dr Gittos examined distribution maps ... to be England's Valley of ...