It is impressive seeing it because it has survived so many years when we know wood rots.
Hoo means a "spur of a hill"
There is no direct connection between Sutton Hoo and Beowulf that we know of. Sutton Hoo is the burial place of a number of Anglo-Saxon people, one of whom might have been a king of East Anglia. Beowulf is an Anglo-Saxon poem about a man named Beowulf, a fictional or legendary hero of approximately the same time as the Sutton Hoo burials, who came from southern Sweden and fought a dragon in Denmark.Nevertheless, the two are connected culturally, because the treasures found at Sutton Hoo are examples of the sorts of things Beowulf might have owned and used. The result, of course, is that pictures of articles found at Sutton Hoo are often used to illustrate editions of Beowulf.
Suttoon Hoo is located in the county of Suffolk in England. It is an important archaeological site due to its rich medieval history and bountiful archaeological finds.
It is still every important, as it is still there,, I have visited and it is fascinating...an important archeological find, that yielded many treasures, all of which are in the museum,and gives an insight into life in the times of the Vikings
The most famous of the Sutton Hoo burial-mounds is Mound One, which was excavated in 1939 and found to contain the remains of an undisturbed treasure laden ship, the funerary vessel of an early seventh-century Wuffing king. In the burial chamber amidships lay one of the greatest treasure-hoards ever discovered in archaeology, including the gold and cloisonné regalia of a warrior-king, silver feasting equipment, and other wonders.The Mound One ship-burial revealed an unexpected world of wonder at the dawn of the story of England, which has led to a major revision in our understanding of the origins and early history of the Wuffing kingdom. It is believed by many to be that of King Rædwald, the greatest of the kings of the Eastern Angles and overlord of Britain from c.617 until his death c.625.
Sutton is a village in Suffolk. The hoo is a spur of a hill. Sutton Hoo was the name of an estate near Sutton, and the burial site is named after that estate.
Sutton Hoo, Suffolk :)
Hoo means a "spur of a hill"
Sutton Hoo is a place in England, not a person. Today there is a museum there and you can view the items found in the burial grounds.
Sutton Hoo is one of the greatest finds in archeology that has ever been found. It is the burial site from the 7th century and contained treasures of gold, gems, and silver. One of the items buried there is a huge ship that is intact. This gave historians an unlimited amount of information of ship building in the 7th century as well as the treasure it contained. The items pulled from Sutton Hoo are exquisite and tell us about the people who made them.
"The Wanderer," an Old English poem, depicts the treasures found at Sutton Hoo. This epic poem highlights the burial mounds' richness and the treasures belonging to a noble warrior.
No he was asian
dun know
It was a burial ground
Hoo means a "spur of a hill"
Maybe
a few