Dr David Woodman and Dr Martin Brett are hosting a two-day conference on 29th - 30th March on 'The Long Twelfth-Century View of the Anglo-Saxon Past' at Robinson College, Cambridge, in association with the Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, and the British Academy. Registration is £20, and details on how to register can be found here.
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The Anglo-Saxon Archaeology Blog is concerned with news reports featuring Anglo-Saxon period archaeology. If you wish to see news reports for general European archaeology, please go to The Archaeology of Europe Weblog.
Sunday 27 February 2011
Saturday 26 February 2011
Anglo-Saxon site will be unearthed
New archaeological digs are to take place at the site of an Anglo-Saxon burial ground in Oakington.
The village sits on the site of a sixth-century settlement described as “one of the most significant archaeological sites you could have”.
Two digs will take place later this year.
Archaeology students, led by Dr Duncan Sayer, a lecturer in archaeology at the University of Central Lancaster, will undertake a two-day excavation on April 12 and 13.
Read the rest of this article...
The village sits on the site of a sixth-century settlement described as “one of the most significant archaeological sites you could have”.
Two digs will take place later this year.
Archaeology students, led by Dr Duncan Sayer, a lecturer in archaeology at the University of Central Lancaster, will undertake a two-day excavation on April 12 and 13.
Read the rest of this article...
Friday 18 February 2011
Searching for Saxons in West Langton
IN A FIELD near West Langton, under the cover of 100,000 square metres of oil seed rape, the secrets of a society long gone lay hidden for century after century.
All it took to bring these secrets to the surface was a determined team of archaeologists, a funeral pyre in the style of the Anglo Saxons and an agreeable farmer willing to allow the clearing of his crop.
Time Team visited the site in West Langton in the summer of last year.
Over the years, the fields they visited have produced a huge amount of Anglo Saxon finds.
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All it took to bring these secrets to the surface was a determined team of archaeologists, a funeral pyre in the style of the Anglo Saxons and an agreeable farmer willing to allow the clearing of his crop.
Time Team visited the site in West Langton in the summer of last year.
Over the years, the fields they visited have produced a huge amount of Anglo Saxon finds.
Read the rest of this article...