Excavations at Sutton Hoo
In 1938, archaeologist Basil Brown was asked to investigate
eighteen low grassy mounds by a local land owner, Mrs Edith Pretty.
He began by opening Mound 3, quickly followed by Mounds 2 and 4.
All had been robbed in antiquity, although the few scraps of once
fine possessions hinted at high-status Anglo-Saxon burials.
In the spring and summer of 1939 Brown excavated the largest
mound (Mound 1) and uncovered an undisturbed burial, the
extraordinarily rich grave of an important early seventh-century
East Anglian. Deeply buried beneath the large mound lay the ghost
of a twenty seven metre long oak ship. At its centre was
a ruined burial chamber built with a pitched roof. In this small
room, once hung with textiles, the dead man lay surrounded by his
possessions.
Since 1939 the cemetery has been excavated twice; first between
1965 and 1971 by the British Museum and second between 1983 and
1992, by the British Museum and the Society of Antiquaries of
London. The 1965/1971 excavations were designed to answer questions
about Basil Brown's excavations, particularly concerning the
structure of the mound, the relationship of the ship to its burial
trench and the structure of the ship. The cemetery was also
surveyed for the first time, revealing the underlying prehistoric
landscape.
The second phase of excavations, starting in 1983, had a very
different brief - to examine the relationship of the cemetery to
the surrounding landscape, to establish its extent and status and,
finally, to examine several mounds and the flat land between. All
these objectives were achieved.