Restoring the helmet from the ship-burial at Sutton Hoo
When found, this magnificent helmet was in hundreds of pieces.
It was recovered from an Anglo-Saxon grave at Sutton Hoo,
Suffolk, in 1939.
The burial chamber had collapsed and reduced the helmet to a
pile of fragments. Pieces of rusted iron were mixed up with pieces
of tinned bronze, all so corroded as to be barely recognizable.
The first restoration of the helmet was completed by 1947, but
continuing research showed it to be inaccurate and it was
dismantled in 1968. The new restoration relied entirely on the
evidence of the fragments themselves and not on preconceived ideas
- the aim of all modern archaeological conservation. It took the
conservator a year of painstaking study and experimentation with
more than 500 fragments.


The pieces had to be identified and matched by their thickness,
texture and traces of the design in the corrosion. As months
passed, vital discoveries were made about the helmet's structure.
The cap size and shape were established by joining fragments from
the top and one of the sides; a small riveted plate on one piece
provided evidence for the attachment of the ear-flaps. The
discovery of the position of a third dragon's head completed the
dramatic face mask.


A temporary support was made (a plaster dome covered with
modelling clay) on which the fragments were held with long pins
while they were joined. The missing areas were filled with jute
textile, stiffened with adhesive and skimmed with plaster. These
infills were coloured brown to match the iron.



Though rusted now, the helmet would originally have been a
bright silvery colour, with the tinned bronze panels, the gilding
and the garnets, it would have had the striking appearance we
see in the reconstruction.
Images (from top, left to
right):
The original reconstruction of the
helmet
The original reconstruction from the side
Piecing the helmet back together
Detail of the decoration
Reconstructing the helmet
Detail of the decoration
The helmet face mask
Replica of the helmet
The restored helmet