Barber s Point is a barren and windswept promontory on the River Alde, home now to sheep, grass and wetland birds. It is hard to believe that, 1300

Similar documents
The Literature of Great Britain Do you refer to England, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom interchangeably?

The Old English and Medieval Periods A.D

Fieldwalking at Cottam 1994 (COT94F)

3. The new face of Bronze Age pottery Jacinta Kiely and Bruce Sutton

An archaeological evaluation at 16 Seaview Road, Brightlingsea, Essex February 2004

THE RAVENSTONE BEAKER

7. Prehistoric features and an early medieval enclosure at Coonagh West, Co. Limerick Kate Taylor

ST PATRICK S CHAPEL, ST DAVIDS PEMBROKESHIRE 2015

SALVAGE EXCAVATIONS AT OLD DOWN FARM, EAST MEON

2 Saxon Way, Old Windsor, Berkshire

Bronze Age 2, BC

THE UNFOLDING ARCHAEOLOGY OF CHELTENHAM

Test-Pit 3: 31 Park Street (SK )

New Composting Centre, Ashgrove Farm, Ardley, Oxfordshire

A visit to the Wor Barrow 21 st November 2015

STONES OF STENNESS HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT SCOTLAND STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE

An archaeological watching brief and recording at Brightlingsea Quarry, Moverons Lane, Brightlingsea, Essex October 2003

Former Whitbread Training Centre Site, Abbey Street, Faversham, Kent Interim Archaeological Report Phase 1 November 2009

SCOTLAND. Belfast IRISH SEA. Dublin THE REPUBLIC OF IRELAND ENGLAND ENGLISH CHANNEL. Before and After

Fort Arbeia and the Roman Empire in Britain 2012 FIELD REPORT

Archaeological. Monitoring & Recording Report. Fulbourn Primary School, Cambridgeshire. Archaeological Monitoring & Recording Report.

Advanced archaeology at the archive. Museum of London Support materials AS/A2 study day

The Vikings were people from the lands we call Scandinavia Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Viking means pirate raid and vikingr was used to describe a

A Sense of Place Tor Enclosures

Lanton Lithic Assessment

Greater London GREATER LONDON 3/606 (E ) TQ

Barnet Battlefield Survey

Colchester Archaeological Trust Ltd. A Fieldwalking Survey at Birch, Colchester for ARC Southern Ltd

An archaeological evaluation in the playground of Colchester Royal Grammar School, Lexden Road, Colchester, Essex

the Aberlemno Stone Information for Teachers investigating historic sites

More work to do at Sutton Hoo

39, Walnut Tree Lane, Sudbury (SUY 073) Planning Application No. B/04/02019/FUL Archaeological Monitoring Report No. 2005/112 OASIS ID no.

Moray Archaeology For All Project

St Germains, Tranent, East Lothian: the excavation of Early Bronze Age remains and Iron Age enclosed and unenclosed settlements

THE ALFRED JEWEL: AD STIRRUP: AD THE CUDDESDON BOWL: AD c600 ABINGDON SWORD: AD C875

A COIN OF OFFA FOUND IN A VIKING-AGE BURIAL AT VOSS, NORWAY. Bergen Museum.

The first men who dug into Kent s Stonehenge

THE PRE-CONQUEST COFFINS FROM SWINEGATE AND 18 BACK SWINEGATE

Special School Days

Church of St Peter and St Paul, Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire

LE CATILLON II HOARD. jerseyheritage.org Association of Jersey Charities, No. 161

SHORTER PAPERS NEW RADIOCARBON DATES FOR EARLY MEDIEVAL SOMERSET. Introduction Mick Aston

Changing People Changing Landscapes: excavations at The Carrick, Midross, Loch Lomond Gavin MacGregor, University of Glasgow

1 INTRODUCTION 1. Show the children the Great Hall Finds.

N the history of the ancient world some vague

An early pot made by the Adena Culture (800 B.C. - A.D. 100)

FURTHER MIDDLE SAXON EVIDENCE AT COOK STREET, SOUTHAMPTON (SOU 567)

Brooches, Bathhouses and Bones Archaeology in the Gwash Valley

Archaeological Evaluation at Alconbury Weald Enterprise Zone

The Celts and the Iron Age

McDONALD INSTITUTE MONOGRAPHS. Spong Hill. Part IX: chronology and synthesis. By Catherine Hills and Sam Lucy

Anglo Saxon Introduce Me

Human remains from Estark, Iran, 2017

Unit 6: New Caledonia: Lapita Pottery. Frederic Angleveil and Gabriel Poedi

This is a repository copy of Anglo-Saxon settlements and archaeological visibility in the Yorkshire Wolds.

The. Orkney Islands Let me take you down, cause we re goin to... Skara Brae!

A NOTE FROM THE ERMINE STREET DIG HUNTINGDON September 2013 EDITOR

NOTE A THIRD CENTURY ROMAN BURIAL FROM MANOR FARM, HURSTBOURNE PRIORS. by. David Allen with contributions by Sue Anderson and Brenda Dickinson

Anglo-Saxons. Gallery Activities

Memento Mori The Dead Among Us

Peace Hall, Sydney Town Hall Results of Archaeological Program (Interim Report)

Teachers Pack

An archaeological evaluation at the Blackwater Hotel, Church Road, West Mersea, Colchester, Essex March 2003

1 The East Oxford Archaeology and History Project

Cambridge Archaeology Field Group. Fieldwalking on the Childerley Estate, Cambridgeshire. Autumn 2014 to Spring Third interim report

Remains of four early colonial leaders discovered at Jamestown 28 July 2015, bybrett Zongker

Archaeological sites and find spots in the parish of Burghclere - SMR no. OS Grid Ref. Site Name Classification Period

EARLY HISTORIC SCOTLAND

Information for Teachers

Tees Archaeology. Anglo-Saxon. Teesside. Archaeological Booklet No. 1.

Life and Death at Beth Shean

Chapter 2: Archaeological Description

Grim s Ditch, Starveall Farm, Wootton, Woodstock, Oxfordshire

Xian Tombs of the Qin Dynasty

Overview: From Neolithic to Bronze Age, BC

Weedon Parish Council CHAPEL GRAVEYARD REGULATIONS

ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVALUATION AT BRIGHTON POLYTECHNIC, NORTH FIELD SITE, VARLEY HALLS, COLDEAN LANE, BRIGHTON. by Ian Greig MA AIFA.

2.6 Introduction to Pacific Review of Pacific Collections Collections: in Scottish Museums Material Culture of Vanuatu

Bristol & Gloucestershire Archaeological Society

Viking Loans Box. Thor s Hammer

HANDLIST SCULPTURE. Woruldhord

Oil lamps (inc early Christian, top left) Sofia museum

An archaeological watching brief at St Leonard s church, Hythe Hill, Colchester, Essex

TIPPERARY HISTORICAL JOURNAL 1994

Contact Details The Collection: Art & Archaelogoy in Lincolnshire Danes Terrace, Lincoln LN2 1LP Tel: +44 (0)

IRAN. Bowl Northern Iran, Ismailabad Chalcolithic, mid-5th millennium B.C. Pottery (65.1) Published: Handbook, no. 10

Photographs. Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Pearson Education, Inc.

STUDENT ACTIVITY SHEETS Lullingstone Roman Villa

Chapter 2. Remains. Fig.17 Map of Krang Kor site

h i s t om b an d h i s t r e a su r e s Worksheet CArter ArChAeoLoGY

The Parish of Findon contains archaeology of national and international importance.

You Wouldn t Want to Be an Anglo-Saxon Peasant!

The Neolithic Spiritual Landscape

The Vikings Begin. This October, step into the magical, mystical world of the early Vikings. By Dr. Marika Hedin

Ancient Ireland. Mesolithic Neolithic Bronze Age Iron Age (Celts) Early Christian Ireland

Vikings: A History Of The Viking Age By Robert Carlson

Archaeological Material From Spa Ghyll Farm, Aldfield

Sunday, February 12, 17. The Shang Dynasty

Evidence for the use of bronze mining tools in the Bronze Age copper mines on the Great Orme, Llandudno

The Jawan Chamber Tomb Adapted from a report by F.S. Vidal, Dammam, December 1953

Transcription:

Barber s Point is a barren and windswept promontory on the River Alde, home now to sheep, grass and wetland birds. It is hard to believe that, 1300 years ago, it was a significant settlement and cemetery along the banks of one of Anglo-Saxon East Anglia s major arteries of travel. To the east is Aldeburgh, to the west are Iken, Snape, Rendlesham and, most famously, Sutton Hoo. Excavations were first undertaken here in the late nineteenth century by one of the fathers of modern archaeology, Lieutenant General Augustus Henry Lane-Fox Pitt Rivers, who found Roman pottery on the foreshore. This, together with a geophysical survey revealing a rectilinear enclosure, lead many to believe that the site was an uncomplicated Roman fortlet. In 2003, thanks to the efforts of Richard Newman and the Aldeburgh and District Local History Society, the first volunteer excavation, led by Suffolk County Council Archaeological Service, was undertaken. Over a ten-year period, subsequent investigations have revealed that the human past of this site, once thought to be uncomplicated, is of greater significance than was previously thought. It shines a light into that most fascinating of transitional periods: the Conversion. On the final day of this year s dig, the last to be held at Barber s Point, a fire pit containing prehistoric pottery, tentatively dated to the Neolithic period, was discovered, taking the history of this corner of Suffolk back to 3000BC or earlier. Later, in the first and second centuries AD, it was a site of Roman salt production. The Roman greyware and briquetage the coarse ceramic used to make evaporation pans that litters in the site in a layer about 40cm thick date from this period, as do a bronze brooch and a beautiful bronze dolphin. There is little distinctive Samian ware at Barber s Point, and so it was a probably a low-status industrial site, and not a villa or settlement. It was the unexpected Middle Saxon graveyard that brought the amateurs and professionals back a further three times, and generated much excitement in the local press and the local archaeological community. This year, a total of five further graves of children and young adults, one showing signs possible signs of trepanation, were uncovered, and it is now believed that the boundaries of the settlement and graveyard have been uncovered. If archaeology is the study of the human past through material remains, then the excavation of graves is, perhaps, the ultimate in archaeology. There is nothing more human or more touching than the moment when a loved one is laid to rest. From a purely scientific point of view, the grave is one of the best examples of a sealed context a deposit which was covered over almost immediately. Thus, any items contained within it will be in as close to their original positions as possible. Their excavation is a painstaking process, based, like so much of archaeology, on barely perceptible changes in the colour of the soil. As an excavator, as a person, there is something profoundly touching in uncovering the bones of somebody s ancestor, in finding for the first time in 1300 years a human being as they were laid out by their friends and relatives. Radiocarbon dating of graves from previous excavations has suggested a date of 650-715 for the cemetery, a period whose significance in the conversion of East Anglia can barely be understated. All the graves were aligned east-west, and contained no or few grave goods, indicating probable Christian burials. There were no warriors at Barber s Point, no shields, swords and spears. Grave goods change in the Middle Saxon period, as the coming of Christianity changed, albeit slowly, the society it encountered. The age of the great warriors of the ship burial at Sutton Hoo and its lesser-known cousin, Snape, was coming to an end. The choice of items interred in graves reflects this. Grave goods become less warlike and, it is true, less common, but that is not to say that people gave up

on them entirely. Old habits die hard, and the parents and grandparents of the teenage girl buried with a box of mementos treasures and precious things collected in childhood, perhaps had clearly not moved on completely from the ways of their own formative years. The grave with the box of treasures was by far the most intriguing of the features at Barber s Point. The nails in the casket, placed by the feel of the body, had oxidised, effectively pickling fragments of wood and of the cloth used to make the dead girl s burial shroud. In the box were a piece of glass, a smooth stone with a hole such as any child might pick up on Aldeburgh beach today, a spindle whorl, some pieces of what seem to be a Roman bridle, and a cowrie shell. The conversion of Britain, then, was not swift or immediate. Historians such as Barbara Yorke and John Blair have pointed out that, to a pantheist, accepting one more deity over all the others would not have presented any great challenge. Even if they accepted fully the Christian God, the early converts understanding of their new faith was clearly not as complete as it could have been. The soil in this part of Suffolk is extremely acidic, and the preservation of bones varies from grave to grave. The last one to be found and excavated this year contained only five or six teeth, while others contained incomplete skeletons. The tooth- grave, while it contained no grave goods and no body survived, is significant for a different reason: it is the last grave at the cemetery s southern edge. Beyond lay only a posthole and a boundary ditch. It is tempting to think that the posthole was for a cross at the edge of the cemetery, although this can only ever be a whimsical conjecture. No man is an island. So, too, no archaeological site exists in total isolation. A few fragments of an Anglo-Saxon claw beaker, which would have been used at pagan feasts, provide an obvious cultural link between Barber s Point s heathen past and the great cemetery at Snape, where a similar claw beaker was found. Perhaps more interestingly, however, are the possible connections with St Botolph. The River Alde was one of the motorways of Anglo-Saxon East Anglia. The site was packed full of oyster shell, reminding us that the river is a source of food, and it is clear that rivers have been routes of trade and exchange for thousands of years. The nearby Deben, for example, was navigable throughout the mediaeval period as far as Debenham where local Saxon monarchs and warlords held court. But rivers had a more sinister aspect: littoral creeks and marshes were inhabited, so the locals believed, by demons. Indeed, much of our East-Anglian folklore is related to watercourses. Black Shuck, the great hellhound, has a name derived from scucca, an Anglo-Saxon word for a watercourse. At Burgh, where St Botolph s relics were taken to lay a demon, there are many tales of the Galley Trot, another great, black dog galley here being related to gulley. Even the Grendel, the beast killed by Beowulf, lived in a marsh and has a name derived, ultimately, from another Old English word for a watercourse. It was these legends that may have attracted St Botolph, the great exorcist, to found his minster at Iken, directly across the water from Barber s Point. The later parish church is clearly visible from the dig site. The early minsters, as well as providing a wilderness into which the British Isles monks, inspired by the Desert Fathers, could retreat, served as missionary outposts. Priests would be sent forth to preach and to establish satellite churches in the local area. Parishes with resident priests were set up later, when the journey from the minster and back again was too great to be undertaken in one day. It seems likely that Barber s Point was such a site. It is too romantic to say with any degree of certainty that the posthole structure found in the southeastern corner of the excavations, as close to the graves as a

building could possibly be, was an early church, but it is not impossible. Nor is it impossible that St Botolph, the early English monastic who was visited by Bede s own spiritual father, St Ceolfrith, for instruction in the monastic life, had links with this community. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle tells us that he founded his monastery in 654. As has been noted earlier, the graves here date from 650-715. We can never know for sure that one of our greatest pre-schism saints visited Barber s Point, but it is a tantalising prospect. Indeed, given the role played by minsters such as his, and the closeness of this settlement and cemetery to his monastery, it is probable. Left: a Roman brooch. Below: the cowrie shell.

Top left: a preserved piece of the wooden box. The weave of a fragment of fabric, preserved where it had been pressed against the nails and the box, is visible. Bottom left: the foot (eastern) end of the grave with the assemblage from the treasure box. Above: a Roman bridle ring and some iron pieces from the treasure box.

Above: excavation is a painstaking process. The author picks out individual teeth, all that survived in the southernmost grave, with a paperclip. Below: the skull of a child, aged about 7.

Above: a bronze dolphin, believed to be Roman.

Acknowledgements: The author wishes to thank Sam Newton and Jezz Meredith for their various helpful comments on-site, without which he could not have completed this article, Rik Hoggett for an enlightening talk on conversion-period East Anglia given at Barber s Point, David Rea for taking such excellent photographs, and the Aldeburgh and District Local History Society for providing the opportunity to work on such a fascinating site. All photographs David Rea and ADLHS 2013, reproduced with permission. Bibliography: Aldeburgh and District Local History Society (http://www.adlhs.org.uk/, last accessed 3/10/13) Anonymous, trans. J Ingram, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (http://www.britannia.com/history/docs/asintro2.html, last accessed 3/10/13) Blair, J, The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society (Oxford: OUP, 2005). Newton, S The Origins of Beowulf and the Pre-Viking Kingdom of East Anglia (Cambridge: Brewer, 1993) Yorke, B, The Conversion of Britain: Religion, Politics and Society (London: Pearson Education, 2006)