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Keyword: anglesey

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  • Paulerspury – Development and Heritage [Battle of Watling Street]

    05/19/2025 7:14:55 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 6 replies
    Paulerspury Village Web Site ^ | 2025 | editors / unattributed
    Paulerspury – Development and HeritageBoudicca's last stand is believed to have taken place within the Parish, since Tacitus' history accurately describes local geographical features. Suetonius Paulinus's forward base was probably Lactodorum since it was not sacked. Boudicca with her forces and supporters swept up Watling Street from St Albans and the final battle was likely fought on the slopes below Toothill, opposite Cuttle Mill. Tactical clearing of trees by the Romans funnelled the Britons and led to an impasse, creating confusion and Boudicca's defeat.Mid 5th century, at the time most of the Romans were leaving Britain, a massacre of Britons...
  • New study identifies the likely burials of up to 65 British Kings

    03/27/2022 8:09:56 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 34 replies
    Heritage Daily ^ | March 16, 2022 | unattributed
    A new study published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland has identified the likely burials of up to 65 British Kings and senior royals... Prior to the study, only one post-Roman burial of an indigenous British monarch from the Dark Ages has been identified (although nine Anglo-Saxon royal graves have been found on previous excavations).Archaeologists now suggest that 20 probable royal burial complexes each containing up to five graves (with a further 11 burial complexes under consideration) have been identified that appear to date from the fifth and sixth centuries AD.During this period, the east...
  • 4,000-Year-Old Burial Revealed on Britain's 'Island of Druids'

    06/29/2019 11:13:34 AM PDT · by BenLurkin · 27 replies
    Live Science ^ | June 28, 2019 06:57am ET | Tom Metcalfe,
    And although the burial mound is much older than the Druids — who lived about 2,000 years ago, if they existed at all — the excavations have cast new light on the ancient inhabitants of the island of Anglesey. Overlooking the Irish Sea from the northwest corner of Wales, Anglesey is dotted with numerous Neolithic and Bronze Age stone monuments. The most famous is the 5,000-year-old passage tomb of Bryn Celli Ddu (Welsh for "the mound in the dark grove"), which has an entrance passage that aligns with the rising midsummer sun. It was archaeologically excavated in 1928 and 1929,...