The Journal

Cemetery gives up ghosts of its past as project comes to an end

A conference this weekend and a new book mark the end of a project that tells the story of burial ground individual­s from 1,400 years ago who lived in Bamburgh when what is now a village was the seat of the royal capital of Northumbri­a. TONY HENDERSON rep

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ASTORY that began 23 years ago when archaeolog­ists started uncovering an Anglo Saxon cemetery on the Northumbri­an coast will come to a conclusion this weekend with a conference that looks back on what became a remarkable journey through history.

The two-day conference celebrates the Accessing Aidan/Bamburgh Bones project, which has created a public display and teaching resource around 120 skeletons from the Bowl Hole burial ground in sand dunes a few hundred metres from Bamburgh Castle.

Excavation­s stretched across eight years as the 1,400-year-old cemetery, from when was Bamburgh was the royal capital of the ancient kingdom of Northumbri­a, was threatened by sea erosion.

Organisers of the event at Bamburgh Pavilion and the King’s Hall say: “It is a celebratio­n of everything that has been achieved.”

The individual­s from the Bowl Hole were the subject of an extensive study, led by Durham University’s Professor Charlotte Roberts, which revealed details of how they lived and died in Bamburgh as it flourished under King Oswald and the teachings of St Aidan to become a cosmopolit­an and spiritual centre.

In 2016, St Aidan’s Parochial Church Council and the Bamburgh Heritage Trust created an ossuary – a place of bones – in the crypt of the village’s St Aidan’s Church, whose own story dates from the Seventh century.

The re-interment of the Bowl Hole people in the church in their individual zinc boxes led to the Accessing Aidan project, which aimed to make the crypt and the Anglo-Saxon stories accessible to the public.

In 2018, the National Heritage Lottery Fund awarded a grant of £355,600 to the church council, Bamburgh Heritage Trust whose driving force was the late Jude Aldred, and the Northumbri­an Coast AONB partnershi­p, supported by Durham University and the Bamburgh Research Project that carried out the excavation­s.

This enabled the crypt to be opened to the public and the setting

up of a digital ossuary, which can be viewed on the bamburghbo­nes.org website.

A book, titled Accessing Aidan, £10), has also been published, with contributi­ons from key figures who played their part as the venture unfolded.

Jessica Turner, project officer for Accessing Aidan/Bamburgh Bones, says: “It has been one of the most rewarding projects of my working life. Accessing Aidan came about because a community recognised that they had a fascinatin­g story to tell.

“The people of Bamburgh are proud of their remarkable Anglo

Saxon ancestors, whose endeavour and adventure resulted in the creation of the cosmopolit­an capital 1,400 years ago.”

Graeme Young, a director of the Bamburgh Research Project, tells how the location of the cemetery was revealed when a storm in 1817 stripped away sand.

The project’s excavation­s, says Graeme, led to “an enthrallin­g story that opens a window into lives lived more than 1,300 years ago of people who were visitors, or members, of a long lost kingdom.

“The story of the Bowl Hole cemetery is just a short part of the long history of Northumber­land, which has been an occupied landscape for thousands of years, but it is a fascinatin­g part of that story as it is such a detailed window into the lives of a group of individual­s.”

Research showed that 45% of the burials were male, 42% were female and 13% undetermin­ed. About a quarter had not reached adulthood.

This means that the site was a burial place for family groups and not that of a male-dominated garrison.

It seems that few of the burials were of people who grew up in and around Bamburgh and north Northumber­land. Early medieval royal courts had diplomatic, trading, and exchange links far beyond their frontiers and Bamburgh would also have been a destinatio­n of pilgrimage.

A number of the individual­s originated from Ireland and Scotland, also Scandinavi­a and some from as far south as the Mediterran­ean or North Africa.

Prof Charlotte Roberts says: “The Bowl Hole cemetery is unique in several ways. There are few cemeteries of this date in England and the Bowl Hole is linked to the royal centre at Bamburgh.

“It has allowed us to give voices to the people buried in the Bowl Hole cemetery for them to tell their story, and a fascinatin­g story at that.

“The skeletons now lie in peace within the crypt, but their lives live on in the form of the digital ossuary.”

 ?? ?? The re-internment day at St Aidan’s Church in Bamburgh in 2016
The re-internment day at St Aidan’s Church in Bamburgh in 2016
 ?? ?? Excavating one of the Bowl Hole graves
Excavating one of the Bowl Hole graves
 ?? ?? > An artist’s impression of how the Bamburgh Anglo-Saxon royal site may have looked. Credit Andy Gammon
> An artist’s impression of how the Bamburgh Anglo-Saxon royal site may have looked. Credit Andy Gammon
 ?? ?? > The ossuary boxes are received into the church
> The ossuary boxes are received into the church
 ?? ?? >
Inside the crypt
> Inside the crypt

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