Warrior Treasure: The Staffordshire Hoard in Anglo-Saxon England

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The Staffordshire Hoard is one of the great discoveries of British archaeology, an unparalleled treasure of the early Anglo-Saxon period. Chanced upon in summer 2009, in an ordinary field north of Birmingham, its hundreds of objects of the 6th to 7th centuries AD amount to a total of 4kg of gold and 1.7kg of silver. An archaeological excavation at the site was followed by a dedicated research project to understand why this trove of warriors and kings was buried, and what part it had played in the bloody cauldron of conflict that shaped early England.

This book provides an accessible account of the Staffordshire Hoard project and its findings. It tells of the discovery of the Hoard, the fundraising campaign to save it for the nation, and the scientific methods used to study it. Its many extraordinary objects are described in detail and lavishly illustrated: hundreds of gold, garnet and silver weapon fittings, unique sacred objects, Christian crosses, one magnificent helmet and more. The book also provides an account of the key places, people and events that place this remarkable find in context, with sections on the kingdom of Mercia and its neighbours, Anglo-Saxon warfare, religion, craft techniques and comparable archaeological sites.

Author(s): Chris Fern, Jenni Butterworth
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 126
City: Liverpool

Cover
Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
1 Discovery and investigation
2 Conservation and research
3 What is the Hoard?
4 Jewel of Mercia
5 Weapons and warfare
6 The royal smith
7 Belief in the Anglo-Saxon world
8 Christian objects
9 Art styles
10 Treasure of kingdoms
11 Burial
Afterword
Glossary
Bibliography
Index