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A new £4 million visitor centre and exhibition has opened on the site of one of Britain’s most important archaeological discoveries. The National Trust has transformed Sutton Hoo in Suffolk so ...
The last dig at the site was in 2000 when the visitor centre and car park was developed. A fresh dig is due to start at the National Trust’s Sutton Hoo site, near to its visitor centre (Joe ...
The Sutton Hoo visitor centre is similarly unassuming but confident, the sort of modest, decent building the British are so bad at pulling off. Two large timber sheds with spreading eaves are set ...
Suffolk is set to feature on a Channel 5 programme. Coastal Adventures with Helen Skelton, Jules Hudson, and JB Gill will head to Woodbridge to when it airs on Tuesday, July 22 at 8pm. In the episode, ...
Creation of a new footpath and viewing tower will enable visitors to follow in the footsteps of the Anglo-Saxons who dragged the royal burial ship… ...
The trust, which runs Sutton Hoo near Woodbridge, Suffolk, hopes The Dig will lead to a post-lockdown visitor boost. The Netflix film is about the discovery in 1939 of a king's burial ship and ...
A new dig is to be carried out at Sutton Hoo, which is known for the Anglo-Saxon ship burial discovered in 1939. ... which we first discovered in 2000 when we were building the visitor centre. ...
Finds from two of the greatest Anglo-Saxon excavations in the UK are being brought together for an exhibition. It will be held at the National Trust's Sutton Hoo visitors centre, near the site of ...
Angus Wainwright, regional archaeologist for the National Trust, said the last dig at Sutton Hoo was in 2000 when the site’s visitor centre and car park was developed.
The first dig at Sutton Hoo in more than two decades is beginning on a section of the site away from the famous Anglo-Saxon ship burial that was discovered in 1939. A National Trust archaeologist ...
The first dig at Sutton Hoo in more than two decades is beginning on a section of the site away from the famous Anglo-Saxon ship burial that was discovered in 1939. A National Trust archaeologist ...