View Chapters

Book: The Public Archaeology of Death

Chapter: Displaying the Deviant: Sutton Hoo’s Sand People

DOI: 10.1558/equinox.34664

Blurb:

The interpretation of early medieval deviant burials has come to the fore in recent mortuary archaeology debates. Yet, critical discussion of how early medieval execution cemeteries are portrayed in museums and other media has received no critical attention. Using the prominent case study of Sutton Hoo, Suffolk, this chapter reveals the interpretative and ethical challenges inherent in narrating and visualising later Anglo-Saxon judicial killing in the absence of well-preserved human remains, but instead through the recording and interpretation of carefully excavated ‘sand bodies’.

Chapter Contributors

  • Madeline Walsh (maddy.walsh07@gmail.com - madelinewalsh)
  • Howard Williams (howard.williams@chester.ac.uk - howardwilliams) 'University of Chester'