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This historic chalk drawing in England once drew outcry over its most famous feature, the hanging appendage lauded elsewhere ...
Rumour has it that the famous Devonshire poet Coleridge welcomed friends and acquaintances with a less sophisticated phrase: ...
Archaeologists recently uncovered the purpose of a 1,500-year-old bucket at Sutton Hoo, revealing that it was used as a cremation vessel for an important Anglo-Saxon figure.
As combs frequently appeared in male and female burials, archaeologists could conclude that grooming was important to the Anglo-Saxons or to treat lice. Archaeologists are currently conducting ...
The 90-foot-long (27-meter) wooden ship was dragged half a mile (0.8 kilometer) from the River Deben when an Anglo-Saxon warrior king died 1,400 years ago.
Archaeologists have uncovered a key component of a mysterious artifact at Sutton Hoo, a National Trust site in Suffolk, England, famous for the seventh century Anglo-Saxon “ghost ship” burial ...
Archaeologists have uncovered a key component of a mysterious artifact at Sutton Hoo, a National Trust site in Suffolk, England, famous for the seventh century Anglo-Saxon “ghost ship” burial ...
In addition to the famous ship burial, a royal burial ground and a sixth century Anglo-Saxon cemetery have been found at Sutton Hoo in the past. Archaeologists determined that the Anglo-Saxon cemetery ...