Description

Book Synopsis
Charles Green tells here the dramatic story of the initial excavation of Sutton Hoo, one of the richest archaeological finds of all time. In the Sutton Hoo burial grounds scientists unearthed a ship containing the treasures of a king who was most likely the last of the pagan rulers of East Anglia.

Green guides us through the scientific significance of the Sutton Hoo discovery: the beautiful jewelry indicates the high level of Anglo-Saxon artistic culture, the royal insignia offers clues to the organization of the East Anglican kingdom and its relations with neighboring regimes, while the burial ships themselves inspire new hypotheses regarding Anglo-Saxon immigration routes. Any reader will be irresistibly drawn to learn more of this archaeological dig which has uncovered such intriguing relics of our medieval ancestors.

This edition takes into account discoveries that have been made since the publication of the original edition. Barbara Green, an archaeologist in East Anglia and Charles Green’s daughter, has revised and updated the original text of her father’s book.


Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
I. Preliminary Activity at Sutton Hoo
II. The Ship-Barrow Excavation
III. The Ship and Some Others
IV. The Grave-Goods: I
V. The Grave-Goods: II
VI. The Burial: Who Was He?
VII. North Sea Crossings
VIII. The Anglo-Saxon Settlement of East Anglia
Postscript
Bibliographical Summary
Index

Sutton Hoo: The Excavation of a Royal Ship-Burial

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    A Paperback / softback by Charles Green, Barbara Green

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      View other formats and editions of Sutton Hoo: The Excavation of a Royal Ship-Burial by Charles Green

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 27/01/2014
      ISBN13: 9781574093537, 978-1574093537
      ISBN10: 1574093533

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Charles Green tells here the dramatic story of the initial excavation of Sutton Hoo, one of the richest archaeological finds of all time. In the Sutton Hoo burial grounds scientists unearthed a ship containing the treasures of a king who was most likely the last of the pagan rulers of East Anglia.

      Green guides us through the scientific significance of the Sutton Hoo discovery: the beautiful jewelry indicates the high level of Anglo-Saxon artistic culture, the royal insignia offers clues to the organization of the East Anglican kingdom and its relations with neighboring regimes, while the burial ships themselves inspire new hypotheses regarding Anglo-Saxon immigration routes. Any reader will be irresistibly drawn to learn more of this archaeological dig which has uncovered such intriguing relics of our medieval ancestors.

      This edition takes into account discoveries that have been made since the publication of the original edition. Barbara Green, an archaeologist in East Anglia and Charles Green’s daughter, has revised and updated the original text of her father’s book.


      Table of Contents
      Preface
      Introduction
      I. Preliminary Activity at Sutton Hoo
      II. The Ship-Barrow Excavation
      III. The Ship and Some Others
      IV. The Grave-Goods: I
      V. The Grave-Goods: II
      VI. The Burial: Who Was He?
      VII. North Sea Crossings
      VIII. The Anglo-Saxon Settlement of East Anglia
      Postscript
      Bibliographical Summary
      Index

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