Military Veterans Uncover Saxon Warrior

News July 25, 2018

(Crown Copyright 2018)
SHARE:
Saxon warrior sword
(Crown Copyright 2018)

SALISBURY PLAIN, ENGLAND—The Guardian reports that an excavation next to Barrow Clump in southern England has uncovered the remains of a Saxon warrior who was buried in the sixth century A.D. The diggers included members of Operation Nightingale, a program that involves military veterans in archaeology. The Saxon soldier was buried wearing a belt buckle and carrying a knife and tweezers. His pattern-welded sword, lifted intact from the grave, still bears traces of its wood and leather scabbard. The condition of the artifacts surprised the researchers, led by Richard Osgood of the Defense Infrastructure Organization, since the site has been damaged by plowing, badgers, and the moving of heavy equipment from the nearby military base. He suspects the Saxon occupants of the cemetery lived in a village in the valley below the hill. “It’s that Saxon thing of looking up the hill and knowing your ancestors are up there on a site that was already ancient and special,” he said. To read about the excavation of an Anglo-Saxon feasting hall, go to “The Kings of Kent.”

  • Features May/June 2018

    Global Cargo

    Found in the waters off a small Dutch island, a seventeenth-century shipwreck provides an unparalleled view of the golden age of European trade

    Read Article
    (Kees Zwaan/Courtesy Province of North Holland)
  • Letter From the Philippines May/June 2018

    One Grain at a Time

    Archaeologists uncover evidence suggesting rice terraces helped the Ifugao resist Spanish colonization

    Read Article
    (Jon Arnold Images Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Artifacts May/June 2018

    Roman Sundial

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Alessandro Launaro)
  • Digs & Discoveries May/June 2018

    Conquistador Contagion

    Read Article
    (Christina Warinner. Image courtesy of the Teposcolula-Yucundaa Archaeological Project)