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Benty Grange helmet

The Benty Grange helmet is an Anglo-Saxon boar-crested helmet from the 7th century AD. It was excavated by Thomas Bateman in 1848 from a tumulus at the Benty Grange farm in Monyash in western Derbyshire. The grave had probably been looted by the time of Bateman's excavation, but still contained other high-status objects suggestive of a richly furnished burial, such as the fragmentary remains of a hanging bowl. The helmet is displayed at Sheffield's Weston Park Museum, which purchased it from Bateman's estate in 1893.

Benty Grange helmet
The Benty Grange helmet, on a modern transparent support
MaterialIron, horn
Weight1.441 kg (3.18 lb) (replica)
Discovered1848
Benty Grange farm, Monyash, Derbyshire, England
53°10′29.6″N 01°46′58.7″W / 53.174889°N 1.782972°W / 53.174889; -1.782972
Discovered byThomas Bateman
Present locationWeston Park Museum, Sheffield
RegistrationJ93.1189

The helmet was constructed by covering the outside of an iron framework with plates of horn and the inside with cloth or leather; the organic material has since decayed. It would have provided some protection against weapons, but was also ornate and may have been intended for ceremonial use. It was the first Anglo-Saxon helmet to be discovered, with five others found since: Sutton Hoo (1939), Coppergate (1982), Wollaston (1997), Shorwell (2004) and Staffordshire (2009). The helmet features a unique combination of structural and technical attributes, but contemporaneous parallels exist for its individual characteristics. It is classified as one of the "crested helmets" used in Northern Europe from the 6th to 11th centuries AD.

The most striking feature of the helmet is the boar at its apex; this pagan symbol faces towards a Christian cross on the nasal in a display of syncretism. This is representative of 7th-century England when Christian missionaries were slowly converting Anglo-Saxons away from traditional Germanic paganism. The helmet seems to exhibit a stronger preference toward paganism, with a large boar and a small cross. The cross may have been added for talismanic effect, the help of any god being welcome on the battlefield. The boar atop the crest was likewise associated with protection and suggests a time when boar-crested helmets may have been common, as do the helmet from Wollaston and the Guilden Morden boar. The contemporary epic Beowulf mentions such helmets five times and speaks of the strength of men "when the hefted sword, its hammered edge and gleaming blade slathered in blood, razes the sturdy boar-ridge off a helmet".[1]

Description

 
Replica of the Benty Grange helmet at Weston Park Museum in Sheffield

The Benty Grange helmet was made by covering an iron frame with horn.[2] It probably weighed about 1.4 kg (3.1 lb), the weight of the Weston Park Museum's 1986 replica.[3] The framework, which now exists in sixteen corroded fragments, originally consisted of seven iron strips, each between 1 and 2 millimetres thick.[2] A brow band, 65 cm (26 in) long and 2.5 cm (1.0 in) wide, encircled the head.[4] Two strips of the same width ran from front to back, and from side to side.[4] The 40 cm (16 in) long nose-to-nape band extended 4.75 cm (1.87 in) in the front and 3.8 cm (1.5 in) in the back; the extension over the nose was straight, whereas the extension at the back was curved inwards, so as to fit the nape of the wearer.[4] The lateral band ran from ear to ear; both ends are broken off slightly below the brow band, but it would have extended further as part of a cheek or ear protection.[4] It was affixed to the outside of the dexter (wearer's right) side of the brow band, the inside of the sinister (wearer's left) side, and the outside of the nose-to-nape band.[4] The four quadrants created by this configuration were each subdivided by a narrower subsidiary strip of iron, only one of which now survives.[5] Each subsidiary strip was attached to the outside of the brow band 7 cm (2.8 in) from the centre of the lateral band.[4] Here they were 22 mm (0.87 in) wide, and, while tapering towards a width of 15 mm (0.59 in), rose at a 70° angle towards the lateral band, which they overlapped at a 50° angle just beneath the crest.[4] The inside of the helmet was most likely originally lined with leather or cloth, since decayed.[4][3]

Eight plates of horn, probably softened and bent and suggested to be from cattle,[note 1] were cut to fit the eight spaces created by the iron frame.[10] No horn now survives, but mineralized traces on the iron strips preserve the grain pattern.[4] The plates were fitted over the iron, thereby hiding it, and abutted at the centre of each strip.[11] The joins were hidden by further pieces of horn that were cut to the width of the iron strips and placed on top.[12] The three layers—iron at the bottom, followed by two layers of horn—were held together by a succession of rivets:[12] iron rivets placed from inside the helmet, and rivets made of, or coated in, silver, with ornamental heads in the shape of a double-headed axe, placed from the outside, 4 cm (1.6 in) apart.[12] Traces of horn on the rear extension of the nose-to-nape band, and on the rear brow band, suggest that the material was also used for a neck guard.[12] These suggest that pieces of horn, extending 5 cm (2.0 in) from the centre of the brow band to the bottom of the rear nose-to-nape band, would have met each extension of the lateral band at a 5° angle, reaching them 6.4 cm (2.5 in) from the centre of the brow band.[12]

In addition to the aesthetic elements incorporated into the basic construction of the helmet, two features provide added decoration: a cross on the nasal and a boar on the crest.[13] The silver cross is 3.9 cm (1.5 in) long by 2 cm (0.8 in) wide, and consists of two parts.[14] A silver strip was added underneath, elongating what was originally an equal-armed cross.[14] It was placed atop a layer of horn and attached to the helmet with two rivets, one at the intersection of the two arms and one at the bottom.[15] Around the cross in a zigzag pattern are twenty-nine silver studs, out of a suggested original forty, that were probably tapped into small holes drilled or bored into the horn.[16]

The most distinctive feature of the Benty Grange helmet is its boar, affixed to the apex of the helmet.[17] The core of its body is made of two pieces of hollow D-sectioned bronze tubes, their flat sides approximately 2 mm (0.08 in) apart.[18] The space between the two halves was filled in with a substance, likely horn or metal, which has now disintegrated; it perhaps projected upwards, forming the mane or spine of the boar,[18] or, as has been interpreted on the replica, created a recess into which a mane of actual boar bristles could fit.[19] On either side of the bronze core was affixed a plate of iron, forming the visible exterior of the boar.[20] Four pear-shaped plates of gilded silver—cut down and filed from Roman silver, as evidenced by a classical leaf design on the reverse of the front left plate, and file marks on the obverse—acted as hips, through which passed two silver rivets, one atop the other, per end.[21] These rivets held together the five layers of the boar, and were welded to the plates.[22] Into the body of the boar were placed holes, probably punched, that held circular silver studs approximately 1.5 mm (0.06 in) in diameter.[23] The studs, likely flush with the surface of the body, were filed down and gilded, and may have been intended to represent golden bristles.[23] Eyes were formed with 5 mm (0.20 in) long pointed oval garnets set into gold sockets with filigree wire edging.[24] The sockets were 8 mm (0.31 in) long by 3.5 mm (0.14 in) wide, and had 8 mm (0.31 in) long shanks, filled with beeswax, sunk into the head.[24] Individual pieces of gilded bronze seem to have formed the tail, tusks, muzzle, jawline, and ears of the boar, but few traces of them now remain.[25] Two sets of iron legs—probably solid originally, but rendered hollow by corrosion—attached the body to an elliptical bronze plate; both sets depict front legs, bent forwards without account for the anatomical differences between a boar's fore and hind limbs.[25] The elliptical plate is 9 cm (3.5 in) long with a maximum width of 1.9 cm (0.75 in), and matches the curvature of the helmet.[26] Four holes indicate attachment points for the legs and another three connected the plate to the frame of the helmet, in addition to a large rivet hole slightly behind the centre.[26] The plate was probably affixed directly to the frame, the legs passing through holes in the horn.[27][28]

Function

The Benty Grange helmet would have both offered some protection if worn in battle, and indicated its wearer's status.[3] As the Weston Park replica shows, it would have originally been an impressive object,[29] and may have been intended for ceremonial use.[3] Experiments using a mockup of the replica also showed that the helmet would have resisted blows with an axe, which damaged the horn without entirely breaking it.[3] Arrows and spears pierced the horn, but they also pierced modern fibreglass and safety helmets.[3]

Helmets were rare in Anglo-Saxon England, and the Benty Grange helmet, both by its richness and its scarcity, signified the high status of its owner.[3][29][30] Such protection certainly seems to have been among the armour of the affluent.[31][32] In the contemporary epic Beowulf, a poem about kings and nobles, they are relatively common,[31][32] while the helmeted Vendel and Valsgärde graves from the same period in Sweden, thought to be the burials of wealthy non-royals, suggest that helmets were not solely for the use of the élite.[33] Yet thousands of furnished Anglo-Saxon graves have been excavated since the start of the 19th century and helmets remain rare;[34][35][36] this may partly reflect poor rates of artefact survival or even recognition, but their extreme scarcity indicates that they were never deposited in great numbers.[36]

Discovery

Location

 
Benty Grange Farm, near Monyash in the Derbyshire Dales

The helmet was discovered in a barrow on the Benty Grange farm in Derbyshire,[37] in what is now the Peak District National Park.[28] Thomas Bateman, an archaeologist and antiquarian who led the excavation,[note 2] described Benty Grange as "a high and bleak situation";[37] its barrow, which still survives, is prominently located by a major Roman road,[40] now the A515, possibly to display the burial to passing travellers.[41] It may have also been designed to share the skyline with two other nearby monuments, Arbor Low stone circle and Gib Hill barrow.[41]

The seventh-century Peak District was a small buffer state between Mercia and Northumbria, occupied, according to the Tribal Hidage, by the Anglo-Saxon Pecsæte.[42][43] The area came under the fold of the Mercian kingdom around the eighth century;[43] the Benty Grange and other rich barrows suggest that the Pecsæte may have had their own dynasty beforehand, but there is no written evidence for this.[42]

Excavation

Bateman excavated the barrow on 3 May 1848.[37] Although he did not mention it in his account, he was likely not the first person to dig up the grave.[44] The fact that the objects were found in two clusters separated by 6 ft (1.8 m), and that other objects that normally accompany a helmet were absent, such as a sword and shield, suggests that the grave had previously been looted.[44] Being so large it may alternatively or additionally have contained two burials, only one of which was discovered by Bateman.[45]

The barrow comprises a circular central mound approximately 15 m (50 ft) in diameter and 0.6 m (2 ft) high, an encircling fosse about 1 m (3.3 ft) wide and 0.3 m (1 ft) deep, and outer penannular earthworks around 3 m (10 ft) wide and 0.2 m (0.66 ft) high.[45] The entire structure measures approximately 23 by 22 m (75 by 72 ft).[45] Bateman suggested a body once lay at its centre, flat against the original surface of the soil;[37][46] what he described as the one remnant, strands of hair, is now thought to be from a cloak of fur, cowhide or something similar.[47] The recovered objects were found in two clusters.[44][48][49] One cluster was found in the area of the supposed hair, the other about 6 ft (1.8 m) to the west.[48][49] In the former area Bateman described "a curious assemblage of ornaments", which were difficult to remove successfully from the hardened earth.[37][48] This included a cup identified as leather but probably of wood,[50][51] approximately 3 in (7.6 cm) in diameter at the mouth.[37][52] Its rim was edged with silver,[37] while its surface was "decorated by four wheel-shaped ornaments and two crosses of thin silver, affixed by pins of the same metal, clenched inside".[53] Also found were the remnants of three hanging bowl escutcheons,[52][53][54] as well as "a knot of very fine wire", and some "thin bone variously ornamented with lozenges &c."[53] attached to silk, but that soon decayed when exposed to air.[55]

Approximately 6 ft (1.8 m) to the west of the other objects was found a jumbled mass of ironwork.[56][57][58] Separated, this mass included a collection of chainwork, a six-pronged piece of iron resembling a hayfork, and the helmet.[56][57][58] As Bateman described it:

 
Watercolour by Llewellynn Jewitt depicting the Benty Grange helmet and associated finds

The helmet has been formed of ribs of iron radiating from the crown of the head, and covered with narrow plates of horn, running in a diagonal direction from the ribs, so as to form a herring-bone pattern; the ends were secured by strips of horn, radiating in like manner as the iron ribs, to which they were riveted at intervals of about an inch and a-half: all the rivets had ornamented heads of silver on the outside, and on the front rib is a small cross of the same metal. Upon the top, or crown of the helmet, is an elongated oval brass plate, upon which stands the figure of an animal, carved in iron, now very much rusted, but still a very good representation of a pig: it has bronze eyes. There are also many smaller decorations, abounding in rivets, which have pertained to the helmet, but which it is impossible to assign to their proper places, as is also the case with some small iron buckles.[56]

Bateman closed his 1849 account of the excavation by noting the "particularly corrosive nature of the soil",[59] which by 1861 he said "has generally been the case in tumuli in Derbyshire".[60] He suggested that this was the result of "a mixing or tempering with some corrosive liquid; the result of which is the presence of thin ochrey veins in the earth, and the decomposition of nearly the whole of the human remains."[60] Bateman's friend Llewellynn Jewitt, an artist and antiquarian who frequently accompanied Bateman on excavations,[61] painted four watercolours of the finds, parts of which were included in Bateman's 1849 account.[62][note 3] This was more than Jewitt produced for any other of their excavations, a mark of the importance that they assigned to the Benty Grange barrow.[62]

The helmet entered the extensive collection of Bateman, where it attracted interest.[66] On 27 October 1848 he related his discoveries, including the helmet, to the British Archæological Association,[67][68][69] and in 1855 it was catalogued along with other objects from the Benty Grange barrow.[70] In 1861 Bateman died at 39,[39] and in 1876 his son, Thomas W. Bateman, loaned the objects to Sheffield.[71] They were displayed at the Weston Park Museum through 1893, at which time the museum purchased objects, including the helmet, from the family; other pieces were dispersed elsewhere.[72] As of 2021, the helmet remains in the collection of the museum.[73] From 8 November 1991 to 8 March 1992 it joined the Coppergate helmet at the British Museum for The Making of England: Anglo-Saxon Art and Culture, AD 600–900.[74][75]

The Benty Grange barrow was designated a scheduled monument on 23 October 1970.[45] The list entry notes that "[a]lthough the centre of Benty Grange [barrow] has been partially disturbed by excavation, the monument is otherwise undisturbed and retains significant archaeological remains."[45] It goes on to note that further excavation would yield new information.[45] The nearby farm was renovated between 2012 and 2014;[76][77] as of 2021 it is rented out as a holiday cottage.[78]

Conservation

In 1948, the helmet was brought to the British Museum to undergo cleaning and study.[79] Permission to carry out the work had been requested the previous year,[80] when Rupert Bruce-Mitford, recently returned from World War II service in the Royal Signals to an assistant keepership at the museum,[81] spent time in Sheffield examining the Benty Grange grave goods.[44] A 1940 letter from T. D. Kendrick to Bruce-Mitford's army camp had assigned him his position, and responsibility for the Sutton Hoo discoveries—"Brace yourself for the task", the letter concluded.[82] Upon his return, he therefore took to studying the comparison material; his work in 1947 included the excavation of the Valsgärde 11 boat-grave in Sweden alongside Sune Lindqvist,[83][84] and the trip to Sheffield, intended to shed light on the Sutton Hoo helmet through comparison with the only other Anglo-Saxon helmet then known.[44] Permission was obtained from the curator and trustees of the Weston Park Museum for the proposed work, and, by February 1948—when, shortly before the centennial of its excavation, Bruce-Mitford exhibited it to the Society of Antiquaries of London—the Benty Grange helmet was brought to London.[85][79]

Work at the British Museum was overseen by keeper of the research laboratory Harold Plenderleith, who in some cases, particularly with the boar, did the work himself; additional input was provided by Bruce-Mitford, the technical attaché and authority on ancient metalwork Herbert Maryon, and the archaeologist and art historian Françoise Henry.[86] In the hundred years following its exposure to the air the helmet had continued to corrode, and certain parts had become indiscernible.[73] The boar was unrecognizable, and the silver rivets and cross were almost completely obscured.[87] A strong needle was used to pick off the encrustation, revealing the underlying features.[88] During this process, the boar, hitherto thought solid, snapped in two.[88] Bruce-Mitford termed this occurrence "fortunate", for it revealed the boar's inner structure.[88] Frederic Charles Fraser examined the remnants of horn at the Natural History Museum, and conducted experiments softening and shaping modern horn.[6]

Typology

The Benty Grange helmet is dated to the first half of the 7th century AD, on the basis of its technical construction and decorative style.[89] It is one of six Anglo-Saxon helmets, joined by the subsequent discoveries from Sutton Hoo, York, Wollaston, Shorwell, and Staffordshire.[35] These are all, other than the Frankish Shorwell helmet,[90] examples of the "crested helmets" known in Northern Europe in the 6th through 11th centuries AD.[91][92] Such helmets are characterized by prominent crests and rounded caps, traits shared by the Benty Grange example,[93] and other than a Viking Age fragment found in Kiev, uniformly originate from England or Scandinavia; contemporary continental helmets were primarily spangenhelm or lamellenhelm.[94][95]

The ultimate form of the helmet is unparalleled among surviving Anglo-Saxon and crested helmets, although individual characteristics are shared.[96] While other Anglo-Saxon helmets were typically formed with wide perpendicular bands and four infill plates,[97][98][99][note 4] their Swedish counterparts from Vendel and Valsgärde display similar use of thin iron frameworks.[96] The complicated construction of the Benty Grange boar, which combines garnet, filigree, gold, silver, iron, and bronze, is unique across ornamental Anglo-Saxon objects,[24] but the general boar-crest is paralleled by the Wollaston and Guilden Morden boars.[103][104] One other helmet exhibits the use of horn, but it is the spangenhelm-type helmet of a high-status child, discovered in Cologne.[4][105]

Iconography

The helmet was made during the nascent days of Christianity in Anglo-Saxon England, and exhibits both Christian and pagan motifs.[106] The boar invoked a pagan tradition[107] and the cross a Christian belief. Roman Britain had been officially converted to Christianity in the fourth century, although Celtic paganism remained strong. In the fifth century Ireland was converted by British missionaries and in 563 Irish missionaries based in the monastery of Iona off the western coast of Scotland embarked on the conversion of the Picts. Christianity almost disappeared in southern Britain after its conquest by the pagan Anglo-Saxons in the fifth and sixth centuries, apart from the surviving Celtic areas of southwest England and Wales. In 597 Pope Gregory the Great sent the Gregorian mission to Kent to embark on the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons. It rapidly converted kingdoms as far north as Northumbria, but initial success was often followed by a period of apostasy and in several cases the final conversion was carried out by Irish missionaries from Iona. It is not known whether the Pecsæte were converted by adherents of the Roman or Irish Celtic tradition.[108][109]

The Benty Grange helmet was made during this time of change, as evidenced by its syncretic display.[106] It emphasises the pagan element, a large boar dominating a small cross.[110] The cross may not necessarily be an indication of Christian belief; it may have instead been chosen for its amuletic effect.[96][111] Whatever the politics behind religious conversion, the battlefield was not a place to discriminate against gods.[112]

Notes

  1. ^ Writing in 1974 about his 1940s examination of the helmet, Rupert Bruce-Mitford stated that "experiments were carried out by softening and spreading a horn from a shorthorn breed. It was clear that a much bigger horned breed of cattle must have been involved in the construction. This was presumably bos longifrons; and there is no need to postulate aurochs."[6] Bos longifrons was thought then to be a species descended from aurochs and ancestor to modern cattle, but is now understood to be indistinct from the latter.[7] On the 1986 replica, black-tipped white horns from a breed of Northumbrian cattle, which had been in the country for 800 years, was used.[8][9]
  2. ^ Bateman excavated more than 500 barrows in his lifetime, earning him the moniker "The Barrow Knight."[38][39]
  3. ^ Like the helmet, the four watercolours are now in the collection of the Weston Park Museum.[62][63][64][65]
  4. ^ This is true of the helmets from York, Wollaston, and Shorwell.[97][98][99] The exception, besides the Benty Grange helmet, is the Sutton Hoo helmet, which appears to have had its cap raised from a single piece of iron.[100][101] The Staffordshire helmet is still undergoing conservation work and research.[102]

References

  1. ^ Heaney 2000, p. 91.
  2. ^ a b Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 227, 230–231.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Museums Sheffield replica in use.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bruce-Mitford 1974, p. 231.
  5. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 227, 231.
  6. ^ a b Bruce-Mitford 1974, p. 233.
  7. ^ Clutton-Brock 1999, p. 84.
  8. ^ Museums Sheffield horn bands.
  9. ^ Museums Sheffield horn plates.
  10. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 232–233.
  11. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 231–232.
  12. ^ a b c d e Bruce-Mitford 1974, p. 232.
  13. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 234–242.
  14. ^ a b Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 234–235.
  15. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 234–236.
  16. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, p. 236.
  17. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 236–237.
  18. ^ a b Bruce-Mitford 1974, p. 237.
  19. ^ Museums Sheffield boar on replica.
  20. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 239–240.
  21. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 237, 240, pl. 68.
  22. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 237, 240.
  23. ^ a b Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 237–239.
  24. ^ a b c Bruce-Mitford 1974, p. 241.
  25. ^ a b Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 240–242.
  26. ^ a b Bruce-Mitford 1974, p. 242.
  27. ^ Museums Sheffield boar from replica.
  28. ^ a b Lester 1987, p. 34.
  29. ^ a b Museums Sheffield replica.
  30. ^ Hood et al. 2012, p. 93.
  31. ^ a b Stjerna 1912, pp. 1–2.
  32. ^ a b Tweddle 1992, p. 1169.
  33. ^ Tweddle 1992, p. 1170.
  34. ^ Hood et al. 2012, pp. 93, 93 n.8.
  35. ^ a b Butterworth et al. 2016, p. 41 n.27.
  36. ^ a b Tweddle 1992, p. 1167.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g Bateman 1861, p. 28.
  38. ^ Goss 1889, p. 176.
  39. ^ a b Howarth 1899, p. v.
  40. ^ Ozanne 1962–1963, p. 35.
  41. ^ a b Brown 2017, p. 21.
  42. ^ a b Yorke 1990, pp. 9–12, 102, 106, 108.
  43. ^ a b Keynes 2014, p. 312.
  44. ^ a b c d e Bruce-Mitford 1974, p. 229.
  45. ^ a b c d e f Historic England Benty Grange.
  46. ^ Bateman 1849, p. 276.
  47. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 223, pl. 73.
  48. ^ a b c Bateman 1849, pp. 276–277.
  49. ^ a b Bateman 1861, pp. 28–30.
  50. ^ Allen 1898, pp. 46–47, 47 n.a.
  51. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 223, 223 n.4.
  52. ^ a b Bateman 1849, p. 277.
  53. ^ a b c Bateman 1861, p. 29.
  54. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 224–225.
  55. ^ Bateman 1861, p. 30.
  56. ^ a b c Bateman 1849, pp. 277–278.
  57. ^ a b Bateman 1861, pp. 30–32.
  58. ^ a b Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 225–227.
  59. ^ Bateman 1849, p. 279.
  60. ^ a b Bateman 1861, p. 32.
  61. ^ Goss 1889, pp. 170–171, 175–176, 249, 301.
  62. ^ a b c Museums Sheffield escutcheon watercolour.
  63. ^ Museums Sheffield chainwork 1.
  64. ^ Museums Sheffield chainwork 2.
  65. ^ Museums Sheffield helmet watercolour.
  66. ^ Way 1855, p. 16.
  67. ^ The Times 1848.
  68. ^ The Morning Post 1848.
  69. ^ The Ipswich Journal 1848.
  70. ^ Bateman 1855, pp. 159–160.
  71. ^ Howarth 1899, p. iii.
  72. ^ Howarth 1899, pp. iii–iv, 242.
  73. ^ a b Museums Sheffield.
  74. ^ Webster & Backhouse 1991, pp. 59–62.
  75. ^ Bowring 2012, p. 76.
  76. ^ Peak District Applications 2012.
  77. ^ BentyGrange Twitter 2014.
  78. ^ Peak Venues Benty Grange.
  79. ^ a b Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 229–230.
  80. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1956, p. 13.
  81. ^ Biddle 2015, p. 76.
  82. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1989b.
  83. ^ Archaeological News Letter 1948, p. 4.
  84. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1989a.
  85. ^ Proceedings 1948, p. 221.
  86. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 229–230, 238–240.
  87. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, p. 230.
  88. ^ a b c Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 230, 237.
  89. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1974, pp. 240, 242.
  90. ^ Hood et al. 2012, p. 92.
  91. ^ Steuer 1987, pp. 199–203, 230–231.
  92. ^ Tweddle 1992, pp. 1083, 1086.
  93. ^ Tweddle 1992, pp. 1083, 1092.
  94. ^ Steuer 1987, pp. 190–200, 227–230.
  95. ^ Tweddle 1992, pp. 1082–1087, 1125.
  96. ^ a b c Webster & Backhouse 1991, p. 59.
  97. ^ a b Tweddle 1992, pp. 941, 946.
  98. ^ a b Meadows 2004, pp. 9–10.
  99. ^ a b Hood et al. 2012, pp. 85–86.
  100. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1978, pp. 152, 203.
  101. ^ Hood et al. 2012, pp. 92, 92 n.4.
  102. ^ Butterworth et al. 2016, p. 32.
  103. ^ Foster 1977a, pp. 166–167.
  104. ^ Meadows 2004, p. 16.
  105. ^ Tweddle 1992, p. 1057.
  106. ^ a b Webster & Backhouse 1991, pp. 59–60.
  107. ^ Foster 1977b, p. 1.
  108. ^ Charles-Edwards 2003, p. 104.
  109. ^ Wood 2014, pp. 123–124.
  110. ^ Tweddle 1992, p. 1095.
  111. ^ Smith 1852, p. 242.
  112. ^ Mayr-Harting 1991, pp. 65–66.

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  • Bateman, Thomas (1855). A Descriptive Catalogue of the Antiquities and Miscellaneous Objects Preserved in the Museum of Thomas Bateman, at Lomberdale House, Derbyshire. Bakewell: James Gratton.  
  • Bateman, Thomas (1861). Ten Years' Digging in Celtic and Saxon Grave Hills, in the counties of Derby, Stafford, and York, from 1848 to 1858; with notices of some former discoveries, hitherto unpublished, and remarks on the crania and pottery from the mounds. London: John Russell Smith. pp. 28–33.  
  • Benty Grange [@BentyGrange] (22 August 2014). "We are proud to open the doors to Benty Grange to our first guests. We couldn't have done it without @PeakVenues . THANKS" (Tweet). Retrieved 10 February 2018 – via Twitter.  
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    • Images on plate XIV
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benty, grange, helmet, anglo, saxon, boar, crested, helmet, from, century, excavated, thomas, bateman, 1848, from, tumulus, benty, grange, farm, monyash, western, derbyshire, grave, probably, been, looted, time, bateman, excavation, still, contained, other, hi. The Benty Grange helmet is an Anglo Saxon boar crested helmet from the 7th century AD It was excavated by Thomas Bateman in 1848 from a tumulus at the Benty Grange farm in Monyash in western Derbyshire The grave had probably been looted by the time of Bateman s excavation but still contained other high status objects suggestive of a richly furnished burial such as the fragmentary remains of a hanging bowl The helmet is displayed at Sheffield s Weston Park Museum which purchased it from Bateman s estate in 1893 Benty Grange helmetThe Benty Grange helmet on a modern transparent supportMaterialIron hornWeight1 441 kg 3 18 lb replica Discovered1848Benty Grange farm Monyash Derbyshire England53 10 29 6 N 01 46 58 7 W 53 174889 N 1 782972 W 53 174889 1 782972Discovered byThomas BatemanPresent locationWeston Park Museum SheffieldRegistrationJ93 1189The helmet was constructed by covering the outside of an iron framework with plates of horn and the inside with cloth or leather the organic material has since decayed It would have provided some protection against weapons but was also ornate and may have been intended for ceremonial use It was the first Anglo Saxon helmet to be discovered with five others found since Sutton Hoo 1939 Coppergate 1982 Wollaston 1997 Shorwell 2004 and Staffordshire 2009 The helmet features a unique combination of structural and technical attributes but contemporaneous parallels exist for its individual characteristics It is classified as one of the crested helmets used in Northern Europe from the 6th to 11th centuries AD The most striking feature of the helmet is the boar at its apex this pagan symbol faces towards a Christian cross on the nasal in a display of syncretism This is representative of 7th century England when Christian missionaries were slowly converting Anglo Saxons away from traditional Germanic paganism The helmet seems to exhibit a stronger preference toward paganism with a large boar and a small cross The cross may have been added for talismanic effect the help of any god being welcome on the battlefield The boar atop the crest was likewise associated with protection and suggests a time when boar crested helmets may have been common as do the helmet from Wollaston and the Guilden Morden boar The contemporary epic Beowulf mentions such helmets five times and speaks of the strength of men when the hefted sword its hammered edge and gleaming blade slathered in blood razes the sturdy boar ridge off a helmet 1 Contents 1 Description 2 Function 3 Discovery 3 1 Location 3 2 Excavation 3 3 Conservation 4 Typology 5 Iconography 6 Notes 7 References 8 BibliographyDescription Edit Replica of the Benty Grange helmet at Weston Park Museum in Sheffield The Benty Grange helmet was made by covering an iron frame with horn 2 It probably weighed about 1 4 kg 3 1 lb the weight of the Weston Park Museum s 1986 replica 3 The framework which now exists in sixteen corroded fragments originally consisted of seven iron strips each between 1 and 2 millimetres thick 2 A brow band 65 cm 26 in long and 2 5 cm 1 0 in wide encircled the head 4 Two strips of the same width ran from front to back and from side to side 4 The 40 cm 16 in long nose to nape band extended 4 75 cm 1 87 in in the front and 3 8 cm 1 5 in in the back the extension over the nose was straight whereas the extension at the back was curved inwards so as to fit the nape of the wearer 4 The lateral band ran from ear to ear both ends are broken off slightly below the brow band but it would have extended further as part of a cheek or ear protection 4 It was affixed to the outside of the dexter wearer s right side of the brow band the inside of the sinister wearer s left side and the outside of the nose to nape band 4 The four quadrants created by this configuration were each subdivided by a narrower subsidiary strip of iron only one of which now survives 5 Each subsidiary strip was attached to the outside of the brow band 7 cm 2 8 in from the centre of the lateral band 4 Here they were 22 mm 0 87 in wide and while tapering towards a width of 15 mm 0 59 in rose at a 70 angle towards the lateral band which they overlapped at a 50 angle just beneath the crest 4 The inside of the helmet was most likely originally lined with leather or cloth since decayed 4 3 Eight plates of horn probably softened and bent and suggested to be from cattle note 1 were cut to fit the eight spaces created by the iron frame 10 No horn now survives but mineralized traces on the iron strips preserve the grain pattern 4 The plates were fitted over the iron thereby hiding it and abutted at the centre of each strip 11 The joins were hidden by further pieces of horn that were cut to the width of the iron strips and placed on top 12 The three layers iron at the bottom followed by two layers of horn were held together by a succession of rivets 12 iron rivets placed from inside the helmet and rivets made of or coated in silver with ornamental heads in the shape of a double headed axe placed from the outside 4 cm 1 6 in apart 12 Traces of horn on the rear extension of the nose to nape band and on the rear brow band suggest that the material was also used for a neck guard 12 These suggest that pieces of horn extending 5 cm 2 0 in from the centre of the brow band to the bottom of the rear nose to nape band would have met each extension of the lateral band at a 5 angle reaching them 6 4 cm 2 5 in from the centre of the brow band 12 In addition to the aesthetic elements incorporated into the basic construction of the helmet two features provide added decoration a cross on the nasal and a boar on the crest 13 The silver cross is 3 9 cm 1 5 in long by 2 cm 0 8 in wide and consists of two parts 14 A silver strip was added underneath elongating what was originally an equal armed cross 14 It was placed atop a layer of horn and attached to the helmet with two rivets one at the intersection of the two arms and one at the bottom 15 Around the cross in a zigzag pattern are twenty nine silver studs out of a suggested original forty that were probably tapped into small holes drilled or bored into the horn 16 The most distinctive feature of the Benty Grange helmet is its boar affixed to the apex of the helmet 17 The core of its body is made of two pieces of hollow D sectioned bronze tubes their flat sides approximately 2 mm 0 08 in apart 18 The space between the two halves was filled in with a substance likely horn or metal which has now disintegrated it perhaps projected upwards forming the mane or spine of the boar 18 or as has been interpreted on the replica created a recess into which a mane of actual boar bristles could fit 19 On either side of the bronze core was affixed a plate of iron forming the visible exterior of the boar 20 Four pear shaped plates of gilded silver cut down and filed from Roman silver as evidenced by a classical leaf design on the reverse of the front left plate and file marks on the obverse acted as hips through which passed two silver rivets one atop the other per end 21 These rivets held together the five layers of the boar and were welded to the plates 22 Into the body of the boar were placed holes probably punched that held circular silver studs approximately 1 5 mm 0 06 in in diameter 23 The studs likely flush with the surface of the body were filed down and gilded and may have been intended to represent golden bristles 23 Eyes were formed with 5 mm 0 20 in long pointed oval garnets set into gold sockets with filigree wire edging 24 The sockets were 8 mm 0 31 in long by 3 5 mm 0 14 in wide and had 8 mm 0 31 in long shanks filled with beeswax sunk into the head 24 Individual pieces of gilded bronze seem to have formed the tail tusks muzzle jawline and ears of the boar but few traces of them now remain 25 Two sets of iron legs probably solid originally but rendered hollow by corrosion attached the body to an elliptical bronze plate both sets depict front legs bent forwards without account for the anatomical differences between a boar s fore and hind limbs 25 The elliptical plate is 9 cm 3 5 in long with a maximum width of 1 9 cm 0 75 in and matches the curvature of the helmet 26 Four holes indicate attachment points for the legs and another three connected the plate to the frame of the helmet in addition to a large rivet hole slightly behind the centre 26 The plate was probably affixed directly to the frame the legs passing through holes in the horn 27 28 Function EditThe Benty Grange helmet would have both offered some protection if worn in battle and indicated its wearer s status 3 As the Weston Park replica shows it would have originally been an impressive object 29 and may have been intended for ceremonial use 3 Experiments using a mockup of the replica also showed that the helmet would have resisted blows with an axe which damaged the horn without entirely breaking it 3 Arrows and spears pierced the horn but they also pierced modern fibreglass and safety helmets 3 Helmets were rare in Anglo Saxon England and the Benty Grange helmet both by its richness and its scarcity signified the high status of its owner 3 29 30 Such protection certainly seems to have been among the armour of the affluent 31 32 In the contemporary epic Beowulf a poem about kings and nobles they are relatively common 31 32 while the helmeted Vendel and Valsgarde graves from the same period in Sweden thought to be the burials of wealthy non royals suggest that helmets were not solely for the use of the elite 33 Yet thousands of furnished Anglo Saxon graves have been excavated since the start of the 19th century and helmets remain rare 34 35 36 this may partly reflect poor rates of artefact survival or even recognition but their extreme scarcity indicates that they were never deposited in great numbers 36 Discovery EditLocation Edit Benty Grange Farm near Monyash in the Derbyshire Dales The helmet was discovered in a barrow on the Benty Grange farm in Derbyshire 37 in what is now the Peak District National Park 28 Thomas Bateman an archaeologist and antiquarian who led the excavation note 2 described Benty Grange as a high and bleak situation 37 its barrow which still survives is prominently located by a major Roman road 40 now the A515 possibly to display the burial to passing travellers 41 It may have also been designed to share the skyline with two other nearby monuments Arbor Low stone circle and Gib Hill barrow 41 The seventh century Peak District was a small buffer state between Mercia and Northumbria occupied according to the Tribal Hidage by the Anglo Saxon Pecsaete 42 43 The area came under the fold of the Mercian kingdom around the eighth century 43 the Benty Grange and other rich barrows suggest that the Pecsaete may have had their own dynasty beforehand but there is no written evidence for this 42 Excavation Edit Bateman excavated the barrow on 3 May 1848 37 Although he did not mention it in his account he was likely not the first person to dig up the grave 44 The fact that the objects were found in two clusters separated by 6 ft 1 8 m and that other objects that normally accompany a helmet were absent such as a sword and shield suggests that the grave had previously been looted 44 Being so large it may alternatively or additionally have contained two burials only one of which was discovered by Bateman 45 The barrow comprises a circular central mound approximately 15 m 50 ft in diameter and 0 6 m 2 ft high an encircling fosse about 1 m 3 3 ft wide and 0 3 m 1 ft deep and outer penannular earthworks around 3 m 10 ft wide and 0 2 m 0 66 ft high 45 The entire structure measures approximately 23 by 22 m 75 by 72 ft 45 Bateman suggested a body once lay at its centre flat against the original surface of the soil 37 46 what he described as the one remnant strands of hair is now thought to be from a cloak of fur cowhide or something similar 47 The recovered objects were found in two clusters 44 48 49 One cluster was found in the area of the supposed hair the other about 6 ft 1 8 m to the west 48 49 In the former area Bateman described a curious assemblage of ornaments which were difficult to remove successfully from the hardened earth 37 48 This included a cup identified as leather but probably of wood 50 51 approximately 3 in 7 6 cm in diameter at the mouth 37 52 Its rim was edged with silver 37 while its surface was decorated by four wheel shaped ornaments and two crosses of thin silver affixed by pins of the same metal clenched inside 53 Also found were the remnants of three hanging bowl escutcheons 52 53 54 as well as a knot of very fine wire and some thin bone variously ornamented with lozenges amp c 53 attached to silk but that soon decayed when exposed to air 55 Approximately 6 ft 1 8 m to the west of the other objects was found a jumbled mass of ironwork 56 57 58 Separated this mass included a collection of chainwork a six pronged piece of iron resembling a hayfork and the helmet 56 57 58 As Bateman described it Watercolour by Llewellynn Jewitt depicting the Benty Grange helmet and associated finds The helmet has been formed of ribs of iron radiating from the crown of the head and covered with narrow plates of horn running in a diagonal direction from the ribs so as to form a herring bone pattern the ends were secured by strips of horn radiating in like manner as the iron ribs to which they were riveted at intervals of about an inch and a half all the rivets had ornamented heads of silver on the outside and on the front rib is a small cross of the same metal Upon the top or crown of the helmet is an elongated oval brass plate upon which stands the figure of an animal carved in iron now very much rusted but still a very good representation of a pig it has bronze eyes There are also many smaller decorations abounding in rivets which have pertained to the helmet but which it is impossible to assign to their proper places as is also the case with some small iron buckles 56 Bateman closed his 1849 account of the excavation by noting the particularly corrosive nature of the soil 59 which by 1861 he said has generally been the case in tumuli in Derbyshire 60 He suggested that this was the result of a mixing or tempering with some corrosive liquid the result of which is the presence of thin ochrey veins in the earth and the decomposition of nearly the whole of the human remains 60 Bateman s friend Llewellynn Jewitt an artist and antiquarian who frequently accompanied Bateman on excavations 61 painted four watercolours of the finds parts of which were included in Bateman s 1849 account 62 note 3 This was more than Jewitt produced for any other of their excavations a mark of the importance that they assigned to the Benty Grange barrow 62 The helmet entered the extensive collection of Bateman where it attracted interest 66 On 27 October 1848 he related his discoveries including the helmet to the British Archaeological Association 67 68 69 and in 1855 it was catalogued along with other objects from the Benty Grange barrow 70 In 1861 Bateman died at 39 39 and in 1876 his son Thomas W Bateman loaned the objects to Sheffield 71 They were displayed at the Weston Park Museum through 1893 at which time the museum purchased objects including the helmet from the family other pieces were dispersed elsewhere 72 As of 2021 the helmet remains in the collection of the museum 73 From 8 November 1991 to 8 March 1992 it joined the Coppergate helmet at the British Museum for The Making of England Anglo Saxon Art and Culture AD 600 900 74 75 The Benty Grange barrow was designated a scheduled monument on 23 October 1970 45 The list entry notes that a lthough the centre of Benty Grange barrow has been partially disturbed by excavation the monument is otherwise undisturbed and retains significant archaeological remains 45 It goes on to note that further excavation would yield new information 45 The nearby farm was renovated between 2012 and 2014 76 77 as of 2021 it is rented out as a holiday cottage 78 Conservation Edit In 1948 the helmet was brought to the British Museum to undergo cleaning and study 79 Permission to carry out the work had been requested the previous year 80 when Rupert Bruce Mitford recently returned from World War II service in the Royal Signals to an assistant keepership at the museum 81 spent time in Sheffield examining the Benty Grange grave goods 44 A 1940 letter from T D Kendrick to Bruce Mitford s army camp had assigned him his position and responsibility for the Sutton Hoo discoveries Brace yourself for the task the letter concluded 82 Upon his return he therefore took to studying the comparison material his work in 1947 included the excavation of the Valsgarde 11 boat grave in Sweden alongside Sune Lindqvist 83 84 and the trip to Sheffield intended to shed light on the Sutton Hoo helmet through comparison with the only other Anglo Saxon helmet then known 44 Permission was obtained from the curator and trustees of the Weston Park Museum for the proposed work and by February 1948 when shortly before the centennial of its excavation Bruce Mitford exhibited it to the Society of Antiquaries of London the Benty Grange helmet was brought to London 85 79 Work at the British Museum was overseen by keeper of the research laboratory Harold Plenderleith who in some cases particularly with the boar did the work himself additional input was provided by Bruce Mitford the technical attache and authority on ancient metalwork Herbert Maryon and the archaeologist and art historian Francoise Henry 86 In the hundred years following its exposure to the air the helmet had continued to corrode and certain parts had become indiscernible 73 The boar was unrecognizable and the silver rivets and cross were almost completely obscured 87 A strong needle was used to pick off the encrustation revealing the underlying features 88 During this process the boar hitherto thought solid snapped in two 88 Bruce Mitford termed this occurrence fortunate for it revealed the boar s inner structure 88 Frederic Charles Fraser examined the remnants of horn at the Natural History Museum and conducted experiments softening and shaping modern horn 6 Typology EditSee also Sutton Hoo helmet Helmets The Benty Grange helmet is dated to the first half of the 7th century AD on the basis of its technical construction and decorative style 89 It is one of six Anglo Saxon helmets joined by the subsequent discoveries from Sutton Hoo York Wollaston Shorwell and Staffordshire 35 These are all other than the Frankish Shorwell helmet 90 examples of the crested helmets known in Northern Europe in the 6th through 11th centuries AD 91 92 Such helmets are characterized by prominent crests and rounded caps traits shared by the Benty Grange example 93 and other than a Viking Age fragment found in Kiev uniformly originate from England or Scandinavia contemporary continental helmets were primarily spangenhelm or lamellenhelm 94 95 The ultimate form of the helmet is unparalleled among surviving Anglo Saxon and crested helmets although individual characteristics are shared 96 While other Anglo Saxon helmets were typically formed with wide perpendicular bands and four infill plates 97 98 99 note 4 their Swedish counterparts from Vendel and Valsgarde display similar use of thin iron frameworks 96 The complicated construction of the Benty Grange boar which combines garnet filigree gold silver iron and bronze is unique across ornamental Anglo Saxon objects 24 but the general boar crest is paralleled by the Wollaston and Guilden Morden boars 103 104 One other helmet exhibits the use of horn but it is the spangenhelm type helmet of a high status child discovered in Cologne 4 105 Iconography EditSee also Germanic boar helmet Context The helmet was made during the nascent days of Christianity in Anglo Saxon England and exhibits both Christian and pagan motifs 106 The boar invoked a pagan tradition 107 and the cross a Christian belief Roman Britain had been officially converted to Christianity in the fourth century although Celtic paganism remained strong In the fifth century Ireland was converted by British missionaries and in 563 Irish missionaries based in the monastery of Iona off the western coast of Scotland embarked on the conversion of the Picts Christianity almost disappeared in southern Britain after its conquest by the pagan Anglo Saxons in the fifth and sixth centuries apart from the surviving Celtic areas of southwest England and Wales In 597 Pope Gregory the Great sent the Gregorian mission to Kent to embark on the conversion of the Anglo Saxons It rapidly converted kingdoms as far north as Northumbria but initial success was often followed by a period of apostasy and in several cases the final conversion was carried out by Irish missionaries from Iona It is not known whether the Pecsaete were converted by adherents of the Roman or Irish Celtic tradition 108 109 The Benty Grange helmet was made during this time of change as evidenced by its syncretic display 106 It emphasises the pagan element a large boar dominating a small cross 110 The cross may not necessarily be an indication of Christian belief it may have instead been chosen for its amuletic effect 96 111 Whatever the politics behind religious conversion the battlefield was not a place to discriminate against gods 112 Notes Edit Writing in 1974 about his 1940s examination of the helmet Rupert Bruce Mitford stated that experiments were carried out by softening and spreading a horn from a shorthorn breed It was clear that a much bigger horned breed of cattle must have been involved in the construction This was presumably bos longifrons and there is no need to postulate aurochs 6 Bos longifrons was thought then to be a species descended from aurochs and ancestor to modern cattle but is now understood to be indistinct from the latter 7 On the 1986 replica black tipped white horns from a breed of Northumbrian cattle which had been in the country for 800 years was used 8 9 Bateman excavated more than 500 barrows in his lifetime earning him the moniker The Barrow Knight 38 39 Like the helmet the four watercolours are now in the collection of the Weston Park Museum 62 63 64 65 This is true of the helmets from York Wollaston and Shorwell 97 98 99 The exception besides the Benty Grange helmet is the Sutton Hoo helmet which appears to have had its cap raised from a single piece of iron 100 101 The Staffordshire helmet is still undergoing conservation work and research 102 References Edit Heaney 2000 p 91 a b Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 227 230 231 a b c d e f g Museums Sheffield replica in use a b c d e f g h i j Bruce Mitford 1974 p 231 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 227 231 a b Bruce Mitford 1974 p 233 Clutton Brock 1999 p 84 Museums Sheffield horn bands Museums Sheffield horn plates Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 232 233 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 231 232 a b c d e Bruce Mitford 1974 p 232 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 234 242 a b Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 234 235 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 234 236 Bruce Mitford 1974 p 236 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 236 237 a b Bruce Mitford 1974 p 237 Museums Sheffield boar on replica Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 239 240 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 237 240 pl 68 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 237 240 a b Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 237 239 a b c Bruce Mitford 1974 p 241 a b Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 240 242 a b Bruce Mitford 1974 p 242 Museums Sheffield boar from replica a b Lester 1987 p 34 a b Museums Sheffield replica Hood et al 2012 p 93 a b Stjerna 1912 pp 1 2 a b Tweddle 1992 p 1169 Tweddle 1992 p 1170 Hood et al 2012 pp 93 93 n 8 a b Butterworth et al 2016 p 41 n 27 a b Tweddle 1992 p 1167 a b c d e f g Bateman 1861 p 28 Goss 1889 p 176 a b Howarth 1899 p v Ozanne 1962 1963 p 35 a b Brown 2017 p 21 a b Yorke 1990 pp 9 12 102 106 108 a b Keynes 2014 p 312 a b c d e Bruce Mitford 1974 p 229 a b c d e f Historic England Benty Grange Bateman 1849 p 276 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 223 pl 73 a b c Bateman 1849 pp 276 277 a b Bateman 1861 pp 28 30 Allen 1898 pp 46 47 47 n a Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 223 223 n 4 a b Bateman 1849 p 277 a b c Bateman 1861 p 29 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 224 225 Bateman 1861 p 30 a b c Bateman 1849 pp 277 278 a b Bateman 1861 pp 30 32 a b Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 225 227 Bateman 1849 p 279 a b Bateman 1861 p 32 Goss 1889 pp 170 171 175 176 249 301 a b c Museums Sheffield escutcheon watercolour Museums Sheffield chainwork 1 Museums Sheffield chainwork 2 Museums Sheffield helmet watercolour Way 1855 p 16 The Times 1848 The Morning Post 1848 The Ipswich Journal 1848 Bateman 1855 pp 159 160 Howarth 1899 p iii Howarth 1899 pp iii iv 242 a b Museums Sheffield Webster amp Backhouse 1991 pp 59 62 Bowring 2012 p 76 Peak District Applications 2012 BentyGrange Twitter 2014 Peak Venues Benty Grange a b Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 229 230 Bruce Mitford 1956 p 13 Biddle 2015 p 76 Bruce Mitford 1989b Archaeological News Letter 1948 p 4 Bruce Mitford 1989a Proceedings 1948 p 221 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 229 230 238 240 Bruce Mitford 1974 p 230 a b c Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 230 237 Bruce Mitford 1974 pp 240 242 Hood et al 2012 p 92 Steuer 1987 pp 199 203 230 231 Tweddle 1992 pp 1083 1086 Tweddle 1992 pp 1083 1092 Steuer 1987 pp 190 200 227 230 Tweddle 1992 pp 1082 1087 1125 a b c Webster amp Backhouse 1991 p 59 a b Tweddle 1992 pp 941 946 a b Meadows 2004 pp 9 10 a b Hood et al 2012 pp 85 86 Bruce Mitford 1978 pp 152 203 Hood et al 2012 pp 92 92 n 4 Butterworth et al 2016 p 32 Foster 1977a pp 166 167 Meadows 2004 p 16 Tweddle 1992 p 1057 a b Webster amp Backhouse 1991 pp 59 60 Foster 1977b p 1 Charles Edwards 2003 p 104 Wood 2014 pp 123 124 Tweddle 1992 p 1095 Smith 1852 p 242 Mayr Harting 1991 pp 65 66 Bibliography EditAllen John Romilly 1898 Metal Bowls of the Late Celtic and Anglo Saxon Periods Archaeologia LVI 39 56 doi 10 1017 s0261340900003842 Anglo Saxon Antiquities The Times No 20 007 London 30 October 1948 p 4 via Newspapers com Anglo Saxon Antiquities The Morning Post No 23 370 London 1 November 1848 p 2 via Newspapers com Anglo Saxon Antiquities The Morning Post No 5 713 Ipswich 4 November 1848 p 4 via Newspapers com Bateman Thomas 1849 Description of the Contents of a Saxon Barrow The Journal of the British Archaeological Association IV 3 276 279 doi 10 1080 00681288 1848 11886866 Bateman Thomas 1855 A Descriptive Catalogue of the Antiquities and Miscellaneous Objects Preserved in the Museum of Thomas Bateman at Lomberdale House Derbyshire Bakewell James Gratton Bateman Thomas 1861 Ten Years Digging in Celtic and Saxon Grave Hills in the counties of Derby Stafford and York from 1848 to 1858 with notices of some former discoveries hitherto unpublished and remarks on the crania and pottery from the mounds London John Russell Smith pp 28 33 Benty Grange BentyGrange 22 August 2014 We are proud to open the doors to Benty Grange to our first guests We couldn t have done it without PeakVenues THANKS Tweet Retrieved 10 February 2018 via Twitter Benty Grange Barn Conversion Peak Venues Peak Venues Retrieved 10 February 2018 Beowulf n d Old English quotations above use the Klaeber text published as Klaeber Friedrich 1922 Beowulf and The Fight at Finnsburg Boston D C Heath amp Company Biddle Martin 3 December 2015 Rupert Leo Scott Bruce Mitford 1914 1994 PDF Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy XIV 58 86 Boar from replica Benty Grange helmet I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 3 February 2018 The boar on the replica Benty Grange helmet I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 3 February 2018 Boat Graves in Sweden The Archaeological News Letter 1 5 4 7 August September 1948 OCLC 804496158 Bowring Joanna 2012 Turquet Josephine ed Chronology of Temporary Exhibitions at the British Museum PDF British Museum Research Publications Vol 189 London The British Museum ISBN 978 0 86159 189 3 Brown Antony October 2017 Dowlow Quarry ROMP Environmental Statement Appendix 10 2 Setting Assessment PDF ARS Ltd Reports 2017 82 Bruce Mitford Rupert 1956 The Benty Grange Helmet Annual Report for the Year Ending 31st March 1956 Sheffield Sheffield City Museum pp 13 15 OCLC 694999446 Bruce Mitford Rupert Autumn 1972 The Sutton Hoo Helmet A New Reconstruction The British Museum Quarterly XXXVI 3 4 120 130 doi 10 2307 4423116 JSTOR 4423116 Bruce Mitford Rupert 1974 Aspects of Anglo Saxon Archaeology Sutton Hoo and Other Discoveries London Victor Gollancz Limited ISBN 0 575 01704 X Bruce Mitford Rupert 1978 The Sutton Hoo Ship Burial Volume 2 Arms Armour and Regalia London British Museum Publications ISBN 978 0 7141 1331 9 Bruce Mitford Rupert 1989a Early Thoughts on Sutton Hoo PDF Saxon 10 Bruce Mitford Rupert 1989b Anglo Saxon and Mediaeval Archaeology History and Art with special reference to Sutton Hoo The highly important Working Library and Archive of more than 6 000 titles formed by Dr Rupert L S Bruce Mitford FBA D Litt FSA Wickmere Merrion Book Co OCLC 858531182 Includes prefatory essays My Japanese Background and Forty Years with Sutton Hoo by Bruce Mitford The latter was republished in Carver 2004 pp 23 28 Butterworth Jenni Fregni Giovanna Fuller Kayleigh amp Greaves Pieta 2016 The Importance of Multidisciplinary Work Within Archaeological Conservation Projects Assembly of the Staffordshire Hoard Die Impressed Sheets Journal of the Institute of Conservation 39 1 29 43 doi 10 1080 19455224 2016 1155071 Carver Martin 2004 Before 1983 PDF Sutton Hoo Field Reports Data Set 2 doi 10 5284 1000266 Chaney William A 1970 The Cult of Kingship in Anglo Saxon England The Transition from Paganism to Christianity Manchester Manchester University Press OCLC 963628882 Charles Edwards Thomas 2003 After Rome Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 924982 4 Clutton Brock Juliet 1999 A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 63247 8 Cramp Rosemary J 1957 Beowulf and Archaeology PDF Medieval Archaeology Data Set 1 57 77 doi 10 1080 00766097 1957 11735382 Davidson Hilda Ellis 1968 Archaeology and Beowulf In Garmonsway George Norman amp Simpson Jacqueline eds Beowulf and its Analogues London J M Dent amp Sons pp 350 360 OCLC 421931242 Foster Jennifer 1977a Notes and News A Boar Figurine from Guilden Morden Cambs PDF Medieval Archaeology Data Set XXI 166 167 doi 10 5284 1000320 Images on plate XIV Foster Jennifer 1977b Bronze Boar Figurines in Iron Age and Roman Britain British Archaeological Reports Vol 39 ISBN 978 0 904531 74 9 Frank Roberta 2008 The Boar on the Helmet In Karkov Catherine E amp Damico Helen eds Aedificia Nova Studies in Honor of Rosemary Cramp Publications of the Richard Rawlinson Center Kalamazoo Medieval Institute Publications Western Michigan University pp 76 88 ISBN 978 1 58044 110 0 Goss William Henry 1889 The Life and Death of Llewellynn Jewitt F S A Etc with Fragmentary Memoirs of Some of his Famous Literary and Artistic Friends Especially of Samuel Carter Hall F S A Etc London Henry Gray Hatto Arthur Thomas August 1957a Snake swords and Boar helmets in Beowulf English Studies XXXVIII 4 145 160 doi 10 1080 00138385708596994 Hatto Arthur Thomas December 1957b Notes and News Snake swords and Boar helmets English Studies XXXVIII 6 257 259 doi 10 1080 00138385708597004 Heaney Seamus 2000 Beowulf A New Verse Translation New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 32097 8 Helmet from Benty Grange I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 19 February 2017 Historic England Benty Grange hlaew Monyash 1013767 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 10 February 2018 Hood Jamie Ager Barry Williams Craig Harrington Susan amp Cartwright Caroline 2012 Investigating and Interpreting an Early to Mid Sixth Century Frankish Style Helmet PDF The British Museum Technical Research Bulletin Vol 6 British Museum pp 83 95 ISBN 978 1 904982 80 7 Horn bands on replica Benty Grange helmet I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 6 December 2018 Horn plates from the replica Benty Grange helmet I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 6 December 2018 Howarth Elijah 1899 Catalogue of the Bateman Collection of Antiquities in the Sheffield Public Museum London Dulau and Co Keynes Simon 2014 Mercia In Lapidge Michael Blair John Keynes Simon amp Scragg Donald eds The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England 2nd ed Chichester Blackwell Publishing pp 311 313 doi 10 1002 9781118316061 ch13 ISBN 978 0 470 65632 7 Lester Geoff Fall 1987 The Anglo Saxon Helmet from Benty Grange Derbyshire PDF Old English Newsletter 21 1 34 35 ISSN 0030 1973 Mayr Harting Henry 1991 The Coming of Christianity to Anglo Saxon England 3rd ed University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 271 00769 4 Meadows Ian March 2004 An Anglian Warrior Burial from Wollaston Northamptonshire Northamptonshire Archaeology Reports 2010 digital ed 10 110 Ozanne Audrey 1962 1963 The Peak Dwellers PDF Medieval Archaeology 6 7 15 52 doi 10 1080 00766097 1962 11735659 Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries The Antiquaries Journal London Society of Antiquaries of London XXVIII 3 4 221 228 July October 1958 doi 10 1017 S0003581500017212 S2CID 246041487 Replica Benty Grange helmet in use I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 3 December 2018 Replica of the helmet from Benty Grange I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 3 December 2018 Smith Charles Roach 1852 Anglo Saxon and Frankish Remains Collectanea Antiqua II 203 248 Speake George 1980 Anglo Saxon Animal Art Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 813194 6 Steuer Heiko 1987 Helm und Ringschwert Prunkbewaffnung und Rangabzeichen germanischer Krieger In Hassler Hans Jurgen ed Studien zur Sachsenforschung Saxon Research Studies in German Vol 6 Hildesheim Lax pp 13 21 ISBN 978 3 7848 1617 3 Stjerna Knut 1912 Essays on Questions Connected with the Old English Poem of Beowulf Extra Series Vol III Translated by Hall John Richard Clark London Viking Club Society for Northern Research Tacitus 1868 Germany and its Tribes The Agricola and Germania of Tacitus Translated by Church Alfred John amp Brodribb William Jackson London Macmillan Tacitus 1886 Germania In Church Alfred John amp Brodribb William Jackson eds The Agricola and Germania of Tacitus With a Revised Text English Notes and Maps London Macmillan Tweddle Dominic 1992 The Anglian Helmet from 16 22 Coppergate PDF The Archaeology of York Vol 17 8 London Council for British Archaeology ISBN 1 872414 19 2 Archived from the original PDF on 25 February 2017 Watercolour of finds from Benty Grange including escutcheon and cup fittings I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 5 December 2018 Watercolour showing fragments of metal chainwork I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 5 December 2018 Watercolour showing fragments of metal chainwork I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 5 December 2018 Watercolour showing the helmet from Benty Grange I Dig Sheffield Museums Sheffield Retrieved 5 December 2018 Way Albert 1855 Notice of a Bronze Relique Assigned to the Later Roman or the Saxon Age Discovered at Leckhampton Gloucestershire The Archaeological Journal XII 7 21 Webster Leslie amp Backhouse Janet eds 1991 The Making of England Anglo Saxon Art and Culture AD 600 900 Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 7721 9 Weekly List of Applications Validated by the Authority Applications validated between 18 072012 24 07 2012 PDF Peak District National Park Authority Wood Ian 2014 Conversion In Lapidge Michael Blair John Keynes Simon Scragg Donald eds The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England Second ed Chichester UK Blackwell Publishing pp 123 124 ISBN 978 0 470 65632 7 Yorke Barbara 1990 Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo Saxon England PDF London Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 44730 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Benty Grange helmet amp oldid 1152904796, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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