ANGLO-SAXON INDEX
at Trinity College, Cambridge
http://www.trin.cam.ac.uk/sdk13/asindex.html
Anglo-Saxon objects
under construction
(selection of images and scanning still in progress)
For objects in the British Museum, try searching their
Compass
database, which contains excellent images of numerous Anglo-Saxon
objects. A search for 'anglo-saxon' produces 70 objects, with text
and images. The 'Tours List' gives a link to 'The Anglo-Saxons: a
Children's Tour', which includes the Sutton Hoo helmet and
belt-buckle, the Franks Casket, the West Saxon royal finger rings,
and the Fuller Brooch.
- Settlements and state
formation (fifth and sixth
centuries)
- Plates from Saxon
Obsequies illustrated by Ornaments and Weapons: discovered by
the Hon. R. C. Neville in a Cemetery near Little Wilbraham,
Cambridgeshire (London, 1852)
- Sixth-century inhumation cemetery, at
Eriswell/Lakenheath, Suffolk, excavated in October 1997
- <etc.>
- Political consolidation and religious
conversion (seventh and eighth
centuries)
- The
Kingston
Brooch, discovered by Bryan Faussett on 5
August 1771, in Tumulus 205 at Kingston Down, Kent
- Sutton Hoo, Suffolk
- The Taplow barrow burial
- Benty Grange, Derbyshire
(Sheffield
City Museum)
- Wollaston, Northamptonshire
- The Franks Casket (eighth century)
- search for 'Franks' on the BM's
Compass
database
- The Bewcastle Cross (eighth century)
- The Ruthwell Cross (eighth century)
- Northumbria
- The York (or Coppergate) Helmet, inscribed 'In
the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit and God; and
to all we say Amen. Oshere' (second half of the eighth
century), now in the
York
Castle Museum
- Mercia, Wessex, and the
Vikings (eighth and ninth
centuries)
- <etc.>
- Two ninth-century West Saxon
royal
rings, one inscribed 'Ethelwulf rex'
and the other inscribed 'Eathelswith regina'
- King Æthelwulf, found in 1780 at
Laverstock, Wilts.
- Queen Æthelswith, found in 1870 at
Aberford, West Yorks.
- drawing
of the design (Agnus
Dei, Lamb of God)
- search BM
Compass
for Aberford
- The Alfred Jewel (and related objects)
- The Alfred Jewel, found in 1693 near
Athelney (Somerset), now in the Ashmolean Museum,
Oxford
- Other socketed objects of the same type,
but lower grade
- The Minster Lovell Jewel
(Oxfordshire)
- The Bowleaze Jewel (Dorset)
- The Warminster Jewel (Wiltshire)
- The
Fuller
Brooch (with personification of the
Five Senses)
- drawing
- for colour image, search BM
Compass
for Fuller
- The Kingdom of the
English (tenth and eleventh
centuries)
- Tenth-century stole and maniple, found in the
tomb of St Cuthbert
- <etc.>
- Seal of Edith of Wilton (late tenth century),
used in the later Middle Ages as the conventual seal of Wilton
Abbey, Wilts.
- drawing of a surviving impression
- Three seal-matrices of laymen, used as symbols
of identity or authority, or perhaps in association with
written documents (late tenth- and eleventh- century); all
three are now in the British Museum
- Ælfric
(SIGILLUM
ÆLFRICI), found in 1832 at Weeke,
Hants. (Okasha no. 119)
- Wulfric
(SIGILLUM WULFRICI),
found in 1976 (in a box in a garden shed) at Sittingbourne,
Kent (Okasha, Suppl. 1983, no. 176)
- Godwine
minister
(thegn), with Godgyth monacha Deo
data (nun given to God), found in
1879 at Wallingford, Berks. (Okasha no. 117)
- Godwine
(SIGILLUM GODWINI MINISTRI)
- Godgyth
(SIGILLUM GODGYTHE DEO DATE)
- for further information on both, search
for 'Godwin' on the BM's
Compass
database
- The Sutton, Isle of Ely, Brooch
- search for 'Ely brooch' on the BM's
Compass
database
The background image is the Fuller Brooch (in the
British Museum)