See this report from Auntie https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leeds-64917979
Apparently, the site contains both late Roman graves (oriented East-West) and early Anglo-Saxon ones (oriented North-South).
Of course, as no other Anglo-Saxon cemetaries have been found in this part of the world, one wonders what the West Yorkshire communities did with all their dead Anglo-Saxons before and after this period. Bury them elsewhere? Leave them for the birds to pick over the corpses? ???
QuoteOf course, as no other Anglo-Saxon cemetaries have been found in this part of the world, one wonders what the West Yorkshire communities did with all their dead Anglo-Saxons before and after this period.
I don't think we have much physical evidence of Anglo-Saxon settlement. Plenty of placenames, not much physical. Some of the church sites probably have AS origins (Bradford cathedral has fragments of an AS preaching cross, for example) so the slightly later Christian population may be mixed into those graveyards.
Guardian description of the same
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/mar/13/remains-roman-aristocrat-extraordinary-cemetery-leeds?CMP=fb_gu&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwAR1RG26u8faxi_MHBFlm3Rklak-V02pxg8bBbSTWLoEDs7-4Kc3Hpd624us#Echobox=1678715547
Aha, the plot thins!
The Guardian pop up told me I was one of their top global readers. Boy, are they in trouble.
we are not worthy...
(scrape..bow)