Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

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Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden

Transcript of Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

Page 1: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

Per. 4Angelica Love, Anastasia

Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden

Page 2: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

Sutton Hoo is a place located in the UK.

It was the site of several Anglo-Saxon burial mounds.

In 1939, the mounds were excavated, revealing many Anglo-Saxon treasures, including a burial ship.

Page 3: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

A ship burial or boat grave is a burial in which a ship or boat is used either as a container for the dead and grave goods, or as a part of the grave goods itself.

(Yes, the ship itself is buried- along with a LOT of treasure.)

Page 4: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

Yep! Some of the items found at Sutton Hoo include: Armor Weapons Bowls, spoons

2 silver spoons found were engraved with the names “Saul” and “Paul”, likely referring to the biblical figure.

Purse, shoulder-clasps and a “great buckle”

Jewelry Pottery Gold coins

The “Great Buckle”, found in the upper

body area of the ship.

Page 5: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

Due to the artifacts and treasure found inside, it’s extremely likely that the burial ship of Sutton Hoo housed the body of a king.

Speculation leads scholars and historians to think it may be Rædwald, king of East Anglia, who died in 624/625 A.D.

Page 6: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

The burial mounds and their treasures date back to 7th century A.D.

The mounds were not excavated until the late 1930’s.

Although the wood of the ship did not survive 13 centuries,

the surrounding sand preserved the shape of it- complete with iron rivets.

Page 7: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

In 1910, a mansion was built not far from the burial mounds.

In 1926, the mansion and land were purchased by a Colonel Frank Pretty.

In 1937, Pretty’s widow yielded to her mounting curiosity and organized the start of the excavation. A portrait of Edith

Pretty

Page 8: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

Each number represents the site of a Sutton Hoo grave.

Site #1 is where the ship was found.

Each site had its own body and artifacts (treasure).

Page 9: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

Of course! The Sutton Hoo burial mounds are essentially a 1300 year old cemetery.

The bodies found were of presumably wealthy class folk as well as execution victims.

While some bodies were cremated, others were found as bones.

Some had evidence of violent deaths (such as decapitation).

While this body’s flesh and bone had completely decayed, its shape has been preserved by the surrounding sand. The stained areas were caused by the body’s flesh.

Page 10: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

Sutton Hoo has provided historians with vital insight to Anglo-Saxon culture.

The variety of artifacts found there evidence the establishment of long-range trade and a mix of Christianity and paganism.

Many artifacts found there give us a visual representation of some of the scenes detailed in Beowulf.

Page 11: Per. 4 Angelica Love, Anastasia Kapetanios, Allison Tjan, Sabrina Van Zuiden.

http://penelope.uchicago.edu/~grout/encyclopaedia_romana/britannia/anglo-saxon/suttonhoo/suttonhoo.html

http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/online_tours/britain/our_top_ten_british_treasures/the_sutton_hoo_ship-burial.aspx

http://www.earlybritishkingdoms.com/kids/sutton_hoo.html http://www3.gettysburg.edu/~jpowers/suttonhoo.htm http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/sutton-hoo/ http://www.princeton.edu/~achaney/tmve/wiki100k/docs/Sutton_Hoo.html