Background during the early Anglo/Angle-Saxon period, with Sutton Hoo in the south-eastern area near to the coast After the withdrawal of the Romans from southern Britain after 410, Germanic tribes such as the
Angles and
Saxons began to settle in the southeastern part of the island. East Anglia is regarded by many scholars as a region in which this settlement was particularly early and dense; the area's name derives from that of the Angles. Over time, the remnants of the pre-existing Brittonic population adopted the culture of the newcomers. During this period, southern Britain became divided up into a number of small independent kingdoms. Several pagan cemeteries from the kingdom of the East Angles have been found, most notably at
Spong Hill and
Snape, where a large number of cremations and inhumations were found. Many of the graves were accompanied by
grave goods, which included combs, tweezers and
brooches, as well as weapons. Sacrificed animals had been placed in the graves. At the time when the Sutton Hoo cemetery was in use, the River Deben would have formed part of a busy trading and transport network. A number of settlements grew up along the river, most of which would have been small farmsteads, although it seems likely that there was a larger administrative centre as well, where the local aristocracy held court. Archaeologists have speculated that such a centre may have existed at Rendlesham,
Melton,
Bromeswell or at Sutton Hoo. It has been suggested that the burial mounds used by wealthier families were later appropriated as sites for early churches. In such cases, the mounds would have been destroyed before the churches were constructed. The Sutton Hoo grave field contained about twenty
barrows; it was reserved for people who were buried individually with objects that indicated that they had exceptional wealth or prestige. It was used in this way from around 575 to 625 and contrasts with the Snape cemetery, where the ship-burial and furnished graves were added to a graveyard of buried pots containing cremated ashes.
The cremations and inhumations, Mounds 17 and 14 Martin Carver believes that the
cremation burials at Sutton Hoo were "among the earliest" in the cemetery. Two were excavated in 1938. Under Mound 3 were the ashes of a man and a
horse placed on a wooden trough or dugout
bier, a
Frankish iron-headed
throwing-axe, and imported objects from the eastern
Mediterranean, including the lid of a bronze
ewer, part of a miniature carved
plaque depicting a
winged Victory, and fragments of decorated bone from a
casket. Under Mound 4 was the cremated remains of a man and a woman, with a horse and perhaps also a dog, as well as fragments of bone gaming-pieces. In Mounds 5, 6, and 7, Carver found cremations deposited in bronze bowls. In Mound 5 were found gaming-pieces, small iron shears, a cup, and an
ivory box. Mound 7 also contained gaming-pieces, as well as an iron-bound bucket, a sword-belt fitting and a drinking vessel, together with the remains of horse, cattle,
red deer, sheep, and pig that had been burnt with the deceased on a
pyre. Mound 6 contained cremated animals, gaming-pieces, a sword-belt fitting, and a comb. The Mound 18 grave was very damaged, but of similar kind. Two cremations were found during the 1960s exploration to define the extent of Mound 5, together with two inhumations and a pit with a skull and fragments of decorative
foil. In level areas between the mounds, Carver found three furnished inhumations. One small mound held a child's remains, along with his buckle and miniature spear. A man's grave included two belt buckles and a knife, and that of a woman contained a leather bag, a pin and a
chatelaine. The most impressive of the burials without a chamber is that of a young man who was
buried with his horse, in Mound 17. The horse would have been sacrificed for the funeral, in a ritual sufficiently standardised to indicate a lack of sentimental attachment to it. Two undisturbed grave-hollows existed side by side under the mound. The man's oak
coffin contained his
pattern welded sword on his right and his sword-belt, wrapped around the blade, which had a bronze buckle with
garnet cloisonné cellwork, two pyramidal strapmounts and a
scabbard-buckle. By the man's head were a
firesteel and a leather pouch, containing rough garnets and a piece of
millefiori glass. Around the coffin were two spears, a shield, a small
cauldron and a bronze bowl, a pot, an iron-bound bucket and some animal ribs. In the north-west corner of his grave was a
bridle, mounted with circular gilt bronze plaques with
interlace ornamentation.
Mound 2 to have been reconstructed to its estimated original height This important grave, damaged by looters, was probably the source of the many iron ship-
rivets found at Sutton Hoo in 1860. In 1938, when the mound was excavated, iron rivets were found, which enabled the Mound 2 grave to be interpreted as a small boat. Carver's re-investigation revealed that there was a rectangular
plank-lined chamber, long by wide, sunk below the land surface, with the body and grave-goods laid out in it. A small ship had been placed over this in an east–west alignment before a large earth mound was raised.
Chemical analysis of the chamber floor has suggested the presence of a body in the south-western corner. The goods found included fragments of a
blue glass cup with a trailed decoration, similar to the recent find from the
Prittlewell tomb in Essex. There were two gilt-bronze discs with
animal interlace ornament, a bronze brooch, a silver buckle, and a gold-coated stud from a buckle. Four objects had a special kinship with the Mound 1 finds: the tip of a sword blade showed elaborate pattern welding; silver-gilt drinking horn-mounts (struck from the same dies as those in Mound 1); and the similarity of two fragments of dragon-like mounts or plaques. Although the rituals were not identical, the association of the contents of the grave shows a connection between the two burials.
The execution burials once stood on Mound 5, in a prominent position near to a significant river-crossing point, and that the graves contained the bodies of criminals, possibly executed from the 8th and 9th centuries onwards.
The new grave field In 2000, a Suffolk County Council team excavated the site intended for the
National Trust's new
visitor centre, north of
Tranmer House, at a point where the ridge of the Deben valley veers westwards to form a
promontory. When the
topsoil was removed, early Anglo-Saxon burials were discovered in one corner, with some possessing high-status objects. The area had first attracted attention with the discovery of part of a 6th-century bronze vessel, of eastern Mediterranean origin, that had probably formed part of a furnished burial. The outer surface of the so-called "Bromeswell bucket" was decorated with a Syrian- or
Nubian-style
frieze, depicting naked warriors in combat with leaping lions, and had an inscription in
Greek that translated as "Use this in good health, Master Count, for many happy years." In an area near to a former
rose garden, a group of moderate-sized burial mounds was identified. They had long since been levelled, but their position was shown by circular ditches that each enclosed a small deposit indicating the presence of a single burial, probably of unurned human ashes. One burial lay in an irregular
oval pit that contained two vessels, a stamped black earthenware urn of late 6th-century type, and a well-preserved large bronze
hanging bowl, with openwork hook escutcheons and a related circular mount at the centre. In another burial, a man had been laid next to his spear and covered with a shield of normal size. The shield bore an ornamented boss-stud and two fine metal mounts, ornamented with a predatory bird and a dragon-like creature.
Mound 1 The ship-burial discovered under Mound 1 in 1939 contained one of the most magnificent archaeological finds in England for its size and completeness, far-reaching connections, the quality and beauty of its contents, and for the profound interest it generated.
Burial ship (Sutton Hoo ship) ic
picture stone ( 7th century), showing a rowed boat similar to the Sutton Hoo burial ship Although practically none of the original timber survived, the form of the ship was perfectly preserved. Stains in the sand had replaced the wood but had preserved many construction details. Nearly all of the iron planking rivets were in their original places. It was possible to survey the original ship, which was found to be long, pointed at either end with tall rising
stem and stern posts and widening to in the beam amidships with an inboard depth of over the
keel line. From the keel board, the
hull was constructed
clinker-fashion with nine planks on either side, fastened with rivets. Twenty-six wooden
ribs strengthened the form. Repairs were visible: this had been a seagoing vessel of excellent craftsmanship, but there was no descending keel. The decking, benches and mast were removed. In the fore and
aft sections along the
gunwales, there were oar-rests shaped like the Old English
letter "thorn", indicating that there may have been positions for forty oarsmen. The
central chamber had timber walls at either end and a roof, which was probably pitched. The heavy
oak vessel had been hauled from the river up the hill and lowered into a prepared trench, so only the tops of the stem and stern posts rose above the land surface. After the addition of the body and the artefacts, an oval mound was constructed, which covered the ship and rose above the horizon at the riverward side of the cemetery. The view to the river is now obscured by Top Hat Wood, but the mound would have been a visible symbol of power to those using the waterway. This appears to have been the final occasion upon which the Sutton Hoo cemetery was used for its original purpose. Long afterwards, the roof collapsed violently under the weight of the mound, compressing the ship's contents into a seam of earth. Using the imprint of the longship in the sand around its location, archaeologist Angela Care Evans made plans to create a full-size replica. Work began in 2021, using oak planks and iron rivets, with help from a charity, the Sutton Hoo Ship's Company. The estimated date of completion was originally set for 2024, but due to unforeseen delays, completion is now slated for 2026. The ship is expected to be fully functional. Shipwright, Tim Kirk, made this comment to
ITV News: "it is really just a big experimental archaeology programme, [but] we're hoping to learn how the ship actually sailed". The plans called for training a crew of at least 80 rowers.
The body in the ship-burial The presence of a platform (or a large coffin) that was about indicated that there was a body present. An iron-bound wooden bucket, an iron lamp containing
beeswax, and a bottle of north continental manufacture were close by. The objects around the body indicate that it lay with the head at the west end of the wooden structure. The man who was buried under Mound 1 cannot be identified. Artefacts near the body have been identified as
regalia, pointing to its being that of a king. Most of the suggestions for the occupant are
East Anglian kings because of the proximity of the
royal vill of Rendlesham. Since 1940, when
H.M. Chadwick first ventured that the ship-burial was probably the grave of
Rædwald, Rædwald has been considered the most likely candidate. The burial of his descendants in the mound cannot currently, however, be ruled out. From time to time, other identifications are suggested, including his sons
Eorpwald,
Sigeberht As of 2019, the refurbished museum on the site states that the body is Rædwald while the British Museum just says a "King of East Anglia". Coins dating to the 620s found at Sutton Hoo, consistent with Raedwald's recorded date of death around 624, and the idea that the wealth displayed there was consistent with his status as an overking have pointed to Raedwald. Analysis of the
Merovingian coins by Gareth Williams, Curator of Early Medieval Coinage at the British Museum, has narrowed the date of the burial to 610 to 635. This makes Sigeberht, who died in 637, less likely. Rædwald is still the favourite, although Eorpwald also fits the timescale as he died 627–28. Although this is a likely explanation it is still controversial, as reflected in the comments in the article on Rædwald in the
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ("It has been argued, more strongly than convincingly, that Rædwald must be the man buried in Mound 1 at Sutton Hoo") and by McClure and Collins, who note that the evidence for Rædwald is "almost non-existent". Alternative suggestions as candidates include other East Anglian kings or a prestigious foreign visitor, or a wealthy status-seeker, rather than a king, though Rendlesham, a known residence of the East Anglian kings, is only away. In 2025 Helen Gittos from
Oxford University argued that the body was an elite local soldier who had fought for the
Byzantine Empire, probably as a member of the cavalry troops known as the
Foederati. Closer inspection of the sword hilt suggests that the occupant was
left-handed, as the hilt's
malleable gold pieces are worn down on the opposite side than would be expected with a right-handed owner. The unorthodox sword placement on the right side of the body supports this theory, as other Anglo Saxon burials placed the sword on the left side of the body. As a body was not found, there was early speculation that the ship-burial was a
cenotaph rather than a grave. The only sign of body being a chemical stain which could have had other origins; indeed, the site includes burials of both meat and companion animals. Further, there is a lack of shroud ties, and no clear evidence of items which might have adorned a body being left in the expected places in relation to the stain. However, more recent analysis detected phosphate in the soil – an indicator that a human body once lay at rest there. The cenotaph theory may be consistent with the transition from pagan burial to Christian burial; certainly as far as Rædwald is concerned, he could have received a Christian burial, and the mound, whether completed before or after his conversion, being used as a memorial and as symbol of the status of the Kingship of East Anglia. Soil analyses conducted in 1967 found
phosphate traces, supporting the view that a body had disappeared in the acidic soil. == The objects in the burial chamber ==