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Related: About this forumNewly Unearthed Warrior's Grave Poised to Redraw Map of Anglo-Saxon England
Nicknamed the Marlow Warlord, the six-foot-tall man was buried on a hill overlooking the Thames sometime in the sixth century A.D.
By Nora McGreevy
SMITHSONIANMAG.COM
OCTOBER 6, 2020
In 2018, amateur metal detectorist Sue Washington was scanning a hilltop overlooking the River Thames when she received a strong signal on her device. Unsure if the signal indicated anything important, she later recalled that uncertainty preyed on my mind. Washington and her partner, Mick, returned to the site twice. On their third visit, they happened across a telltale sign of an exciting find: namely, two ancient bronze vessels.
As it turns out, the Washingtons had stumbled onto a 1,400-year-old burial. Realizing the sites significance, the couple turned the investigation over to the Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS) for Buckinghamshire, which in turn contacted the University of Readings archaeology department.
Archaeologists began digging at the site in earnest this August. Now, the team has revealed what excavations unearthed: a rare Anglo-Saxon grave, complete with a mans skeleton and an assortment of valuable weapons. Dubbed the Marlow Warlord in honor of a nearby town, the commanding, six-foot-tall man was buried in a hillside grave sometime in the sixth century A.D.
. . .
He adds, This the first burial of its kind found in the mid-Thames basin, which is often overlooked in favor of the Upper Thames and London. It suggests that the people living in this region may have been more important than historians previously suspected.
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/anglo-saxon-warrior-unearthed-britain-180975981/
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Newly Unearthed Warrior's Grave Poised to Redraw Map of Anglo-Saxon England (Original Post)
Judi Lynn
Oct 2020
OP
Siwsan
(27,268 posts)1. I wonder if they will try to re-create his facial features from his skull bones
That always fascinates me. They did that at the Jorvik Viking Centre in York, UK. A video showed the whole process, and what I saw, then, is likely very primitive compared to the techniques they use now. But it showed a very believable face of a man who had been dead for over 1,000 years.
AZ8theist
(6,466 posts)2. I don't know....
If you look at the picture of the skeleton, the skull looks pretty deformed.
Siwsan
(27,268 posts)3. Those forensic anthropologists can do amazing work with bits of bones.
Reconstruct what they have and let the computer fill in the missing bits.
AZ8theist
(6,466 posts)4. Let's hope so...
Yes , the technology today is pretty amazing. Hard to tell the condition from just one picture, but that skull sure looked better.....about a thousand years ago!!
Still a fascinating discovery.