Spong Hill, with over 2500 cremations, remains the largest early
Anglo-Saxon cremation cemetery to have been excavated in Britain. This
volume presents the long-awaited chronology and synthesis of the site.
It gives a detailed overview of the artefactual evidence, which includes
over 1200 objects of bone, antler and ivory. Using this information,
together with programmes of correspondence analysis of the cremation
urns and the grave-goods, a revised phasing and chronology of the site
is offered, which argues that it is largely fifth-century in date. The
implications of this revised dating for interpretations of the early
medieval period in Britain and further afield are explored in full.