The Saxon Burial Ground at Street Houses overlooking Carlin How

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The burial ground of a Saxon princess who lay for thirteenth century overlooking the Hill of Witches where the Craggs line of Farndales would later make their home

 

 

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The place of Saxon Ghosts

An aristocratic burial ground at Street House near Loftus and Carlin How, in Cleveland, dates to about 650 CE, a period of transition from paganism to Christianity in England. This location would have been just within the northern border of Deira.

The cemetery was superimposed on a prehistoric monument and there lay a high ranking woman on a bed surrounded by 109 graves.

The royal princess watched over Carlin How, the hill of witches, for thirteen centuries until she was excavated in 2005. In Victorian times, the Craggs line of Farndales would make Craggs Farm at Carlin How, their home, in this place of Saxon ghosts.

The Saxon noblewoman died between 650 and 700 CE. There were no remaining bones in the grave, but she has been identified as a female of an elite class by the jewellery and other treasures. She was laid to rest on a wooden bed which was placed into the earth. The grave was then fitted with a timber structure which was built over the top of the mound. This practice is referred to as a bed burial. Similar practices in Kent might suggest that this family had some link to the East Saxons.

 

A Cleveland Treasure

The cemetery was only used for a short period of time and is focused on one burial near the centre of the cemetery, known as grave 42. The objects from this grave were the first indication to archaeologists that this was the site of the burial of an important person. Grave 42 contained three gold pendants, each one unique in northern England. The female had been placed on a wooden bed with iron fittings and decoration. Bed burials are very rare and had only been found previously in southern England.

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The grave contained some extraordinary objects including three golden pendants, two glass beads, a gold wire and part of a jet hairpin.

The most extraordinary object is a shield shaped golden pendant. Nothing like it has been found amongst Anglo Saxon archaeological artefacts apart from the Sutton Hoo treasures. The pendant is made of gold with 57 small red gemstones sitting on a thin gold alloy foil. The pendant may have been made from gold coins from the continent that had been debased.

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The remarkable grave jewellery to be seen today at Kirkleatham museum

Close to the bed burial place of the princess, in a nearby grave, a pendant was found, with a reused Iron Age bead as its centrepiece, surrounded by gold, carefully crafted to fit its triangular shape.

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Another remarkable piece was this magnificent golden pendant, which was probably created between 630 to 650 CE in a workshop in Kent. It was found in the bed burial grave, together with other treasures, including four glass beads, one adorned with gold wire, and a small gold cylinder that acted as a spacer. These items together were probably worn on a chain.  It may have been an amulet, worn as a charm for religious purposes.

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  A close-up of various jewelry

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There are only a small number of bed burials in England including two at the royal cemetery at Sutton Hoo in Suffolk. There is another example at the Prittelworth burial site in Essex, which was recreated at the Chalke History Festival in 2024.

The bed was placed in a chambered tomb with a low mound marking the site of the grave. Other graves define the extent of the burial area which forms an irregular square 36 metres by 34 metres. There are two buildings within the cemetery, one possibly a mortuary house where the princess from grave 42 may have been laid prior to her burial. The cemetery was created within an earlier Iron Age enclosure dating to about 200 CE and the link to the past may have been deliberate.

Grave 42 is the richest single Anglo-Saxon grave in the North East defined by the quantity and quality of the material found.

A model of a village

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This diorama at the Kirkleatham Museum represents the Royal Saxon settlement excavated at modern day Street House.

 

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