With contributions by Elisabeth Crowfoot, Vera and Stuart Friedenson, Tony Gregory, Jacqueline McKinley, and Peter Robins. Illustrations by Piers Wallace and Kenneth Penn. Photographs by Jacqueline McKinley and David Wicks.
An assessment excavation was carried out on a low but distinct mound in Oxborough parish where a metal-detector survey and fieldwalking had recovered forty-one Early Saxon objects and a concentration of prehistoric flints, suggesting that the mound represented the remains of a barrow, later re-used as the focus of an Early Saxon cemetery.
Although excavation revealed that the mound was natural, it was encircled by a ring-ditch, possibly in prehistoric times. Ten graves were found, some containing articulated skeletons, others jumbled bones.One skull bore the neat and healed hole of a successful trepanation. Grave-goods were few, perhaps because some had been carried away by the plough. The finds are typical of 'Anglian' burials of the 6th century, except for a silvered bronze buckle of possible Kentish origin.
The results of the excavation were unexpected in that the quantity of finds from the topsoil were thought to indicate a considerable number of Early Saxon graves. In practice, most had been destroyed by ploughing, and their contents brought up to the ploughsoil. This result has implications for excavation strategy and for the interpretation of fieldwork evidence in areas of intense arable farming.
Author(s): Kenneth Penn
Series: East Anglian Archaeology Occasional Papers, 5
Publisher: Field Archaeology Division, Norfolk Museums Service
Year: 1998
Language: English
Pages: 36
City: Dereham
List of Contents
List of Plates
List of Figures
List of Tables
Contributors
Acknowledgements
Summary
Chapter 1. Introduction
I. Location and topography
II. Discovery
III. Aims of excavation
Chapter 2. The excavation and catalogue of graves
I. Method
II. The ring-ditch
III. Catalogue of graves
IV. Other features
Chapter 3. Unassociated finds of Early Saxon date from metal-detector survey and excavation
Chapter 4. Specialist reports
I. The flints, by Peter Robins
II. The Iron Age coin, by Tony Gregory
III. The Early Saxon pottery, by Stuart and Vera Friedenson
IV. The textiles, by Elisabeth Crowfoot
(the fibres by H. M. Appleyard)
V. Human skeletal remains, by Jacqueline McKinley
Chapter 5. Discussion and conclusions
Bibliography
Index, by Lyn Greenwood