The famous helmet is among the Anglo-Saxon artifacts that indicate an eastern link with the Byzantine Empire. The famous ...
Helen Gittos, a professor of medieval history at Oxford University, in the U.K., has developed a new theory regarding the ...
Sutton Hoo - first excavated by self-taught archaeologist Basil Brown in 1939 - is widely considered to be England's Valley ...
Sutton Hoo burials may have been British soldiers who fought in Byzantine army - For years, it was believed that royals could ...
Archaeologists uncovered an Anglo-Saxon burial ship at Sutton Hoo thought to be related to King Raedwald in 1939 But Dr Gittos suggests Byzantine Army soldiers - recruited from the region in AD575 ...
The Sutton Hoo ship burial dates to between around AD 610 and AD 635, when the site belonged to the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of East Anglia. In AD 575, the Byzantine army 'urgently' needed more ...
The Sutton Hoo burial mounds did not contain items from ... The burials are a collection of Anglo-Saxon artefacts found in a ship burial in Sutton. It was discovered in 1939 and originally thought ...
has released a new research paper into the Anglo Saxon wonder near Woodbridge in Suffolk. She has put forward a theory that those buried at Sutton Hoo could have been recruited by the Byzantine ...