The previously unknown settlement appears to have been abandoned at some point in the 1300s, but researchers don't know why ...
Find marks first systematically identified burial site associated with plague burials in Europe, scientists say ...
Spotted off the coast of Denmark, the "Svaelget 2" is a cog, a kind of large trading vessel used in the Middle Ages. Experts ...
“The find is a milestone for maritime archaeology. It’s the largest cog we know of, and it gives us a unique opportunity to ...
Researchers traced the roots of population movements to England during the early medieval period, from the end of Roman rule ...
Maritime archaeologists from Denmark's Viking Ship Museum have unearthed an extraordinary find beneath the waters near Copenhagen - the largest medieval cog ever discovered. The 600-year-old vessel ...
England was never as isolated as many history books once suggested. New research shows that people moved into and across England steadily for centuries, arriving from places as distant as the ...
The book is Emendatio vitae —The Emending of Life—written in the 14th century by Richard Rolle, a Yorkshire hermit and mystic ...
Migration into England was continuous from the Romans through to the Normans and men and women moved from different places ...
Archaeologists confirm the existence of medieval ship after the unprecedented discovery of a well-preserved cog in Denmark.
Archaeologists have uncovered a 'nationally important' Anglo-Saxon burial site during excavations for a new nuclear power ...
The remains of Svaelget 2 included a covered platform known as a "castle deck" where sailors could hide from the weather.