Warrior Queen

  20 September 2003 Warrior Queen Is Unearthed

Lincolnshire County, England A 1,500-year-old Anglo-Saxon "warrior queen" has been found buried just two feet under the surface of a county field. Lincolnshire's own 6ft tall "Boadicea" has been described as one of the best Anglo-Saxon finds of its kind in the county. She was still holding her shield and had a dagger at her side when she was found. On either side of her at the site just outside Lincoln were the remains of a man and a woman who were possibly her attendants. The woman was wearing an amber necklace and had her feet bound together with rope. The male companion was buried with his hand over a pot. The exceptional discovery was originally made by a man with a metal detector. Mystery surrounds the identity of the 6ft tall warrior queen. Her ancient Briton predecessor Boadicea led a rebellion against the Romans in 61AD. After the Romans left England in 410AD tribal conflict was rife and the mystery queen might have fallen victim to this. All the bones and artefacts discovered at the scene are now being examined by independent conservator Wessex Archaeology and at a later date will be brought back to the City and County Museum in Friars Lane. Lincolnshire County Council archaeologist Adam Daubney said that there was an enormous sense of excitement when the bodies were unearthed. "Any discovery from Anglo-Saxon times is important for Lincolnshire because this era of history is not as well documented as other periods," he said. "In other parts of Lincolnshire we have found two large Saxon burial sites at Loveden Hill and Ruskington. "But one of the interesting things about this is that a total of four shields have been found. "The shield would have been originally made from wood but the boss - which held the handle in place - was made of iron and this has survived." The Channel Four television programme Time Team carried out the excavation and the programme is due to be broadcast next spring. The owner of the land on which the burial site was discovered asked not to be named to avoid the venue's location becoming common knowledge. He said: "Two years ago a discovery of a brooch was made on the site which was unmistakably Anglo-Saxon. It was incredibly exciting to discover the burial site." Councillor Marianne Overton, a member of Navenby Archaeology Group which assisted Time Team with the excavation, helped out at the three- day dig which took place between Tuesday and Thursday last week. "What struck me was that there are possibly a great many more sites like this across the county," she said. "When you actually see the venue and are able to imagine what life would have been like then you get a strong sense of the history of the county in which we live."