Taplow burial

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The burial mound amongst more recent tombs
File:Taplow Prince DSCF7240.jpg
Belt buckle of the "Taplow Prince"
File:Taplow burial sketch.jpg
Sketch of the burial, made at the 1883 excavation
Pair of drinking horns, made from aurochs horns with silver-gilt mounts.

The Taplow burial is a 7th-century Anglo-Saxon burial mound in a part of a churchyard at the edge of the small riverside estate of Taplow Court, Buckinghamshire. The burial dates to ca. AD 620, roughly contemporary with the Sutton Hoo burial. The barrow is on a low hill overlooking the Thames Valley.

History

The name Taplow itself is in origin that of the burial mound, from Old English Tæppas hláw "Tæppa's mound", so that the name of the unknown chief or nobleman buried in the mound would seem to have been Tæppa.

The location of the barrow is right at the usual boundary of the kingdoms of Wessex, Sussex, Essex and Mercia during the early (6th century) Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. As the southern Chilterns region was conquered by Mercia in the early 7th century, the occupant of the barrow at the moment of his death might have been a Kentish sub-king under Mercian dominion.

Taplow hoard

The burial was excavated in 1883 when a hoard of treasures was discovered, on a smaller scale but of similar quality to the Sutton Hoo hoard found in 1939. The local antiquarians who excavated the site in 1883 caused a lot of damage to the site and failed to keep a consistent record of their observations.

Artifacts

Among the grave goods, now in the British Museum, were 19 vessels for feasting and drinking, at least three weapon sets, a lyre, a gaming board, and rich textiles, the whole ensemble "recognisably a version of the standard Germanic princely kit". Many of the objects seem to be of Kentish origin. The several gold braids in the burial may have been a symbol of royalty, and the largest horns and the belt buckle were apparently already old when buried, suggesting the treasure of a "Kentish princely family".[1]

All at the British Museum, with several displayed in Room 41:

Notes

  1. Tyler, 55-56; 56 quoted

See also

List of hoards in Britain

References