"Finds from Rendlesham incl 8 Byzantine coins of L6th-E7thC...considered indicative of direct mercantile contacts with the Mediterranean..."pic.twitter.com/5CaY4onLtZ
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"Finds from Rendlesham incl 8 Byzantine coins of L6th-E7thC...considered indicative of direct mercantile contacts with the Mediterranean..."pic.twitter.com/5CaY4onLtZ
Hmmm That's good What routes(?)Maritime or rivers (?)
Rivers and sea :)
I accept it is longheld cherished belief AS EarlyMedieval historians to imagine their kings to be fond of glorified woodsheds
Hah! Know what you mean! ;) See also the villa-palace at Lincoln and perhaps Castor:https://twitter.com/caitlinrgreen/status/733023356824518656 …
exactly Consider how resilient Roman buildings are My take is that we are over-apocalypting Post-Adventus Saxonum Britain
true: in a number of ways, not that dissimilar to parts of continent, esp if we look at places like Lincoln...
suggesting people live on more than one floor and was holding a banquet a the time so upper floors were elegant
makes sense: Roman gates at Lincoln still had 2nd storey in 11thC and Castor palace w/ multiple floors poss survived to 7thC...
TBH it is the same on the Continent for some reasons women with short dresses as if & irrealistic hairdopic.twitter.com/Aguoww2LaG
less prone to fire &possibly decorated Rendlesham on a core of Roman villa makes totally sense
but Romans built to last Paris Emperor Julian palace lasted to 11thC I take our Jute/Saxon/Angle kings prefered abodes dry
Logical will rpt again&again Continental Pagan kings had no fear of stone buildings Living in Roman villas I accept it is
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