See you in 2027 @anzamems.bsky.social on my home turf at Flinders Uni!
Fun times at ANZAMEMS 2025 in Melbourne with all my nerdy medieval frens (and Penny the AirBnB doggo)
Love getting the opportunity to tell these stories and to highlight all the hard work that’s been done by countless people to help us better understand the how, what and why of the Viking world 🙏
👀
Ouch! @ericasteiner.bsky.social discussing tattooing in the ancient/early medieval world, why people got tattoos, what they looked like and the (painful looking) implements they may have used @anzamems.bsky.social
Flinders PhD candidate, @danclaggett.bsky.social, presenting his research on ship burials at the @anzamems.bsky.social 2025 conference. (Note here his use of @flindersuniversity.bsky.social alumna, Dr Claire Ratican's, new book!)
ANZAMEMS 2025 conference begins! @erinsebo.bsky.social on friendship in Beowulf and trying to understand the titular characters seemingly very unfriendly act of allowing his friend to be eaten by Grendel 🤔 @anzamems.bsky.social
The last week of school term, every term, between Years 6 to 9 ensured that I'm also in the double digits with School of Rock 🤝
Had the opportunity to present my PhD work at the SA Museum a couple of weeks back as part of Viking Fest. Nerves aplenty talking to a public audience for the first time, but I held my own!
Was great to see all the passionate people who came out to reenact and recreate the Viking world in Adelaide!
😮 can’t wait to see the results of this!!
Half a worlds worth of travel back home and I finally get to see the Galloway Hoard with my own eyes 🤩
@ntlmuseumsscot.bsky.social and the SA Museum did a great job with this one 🥇
The ever elusive Vikings in Man, good find!
Hillforts.
The Great Viking Survey is the most extensive study ever conducted on global perceptions of the vikings and their world. Your voice matters: no matter who or where you are, every response counts! Take the survey, spread the word, and be part of this groundbreaking project at vikingsurvey.org!
Thanks to everyone who attended my riveting (certainly not the last time I’ll be using that pun) talk last night at the @lamps-edinburgh.bsky.social seminar series. Great audience and great questions!
"Those who had never before seen Constantinople looked upon it very earnestly, for they never thought there could be in all the world so rich a city…the height and the length of that city which above all others was sovereign."
- Geoffrey of Villehardouin, 1203 CE
Good morning from Istanbul 👋 🇹🇷
Hey, it’s me!
Been a while since I’ve been able work with this kind of cutting edge kit. One of many “ooh, ahh” moments I’ll be experiencing in the months to come!
Massive thanks to David Martin, VP of the Manx Antiquarian Society (and whose family has owned the land KeD is located on for over 500 years!) for showing me Knock-e-Dhooney and sharing his knowledge on the history of the site and the area generally.
The Knock-e-Dhooney (KeD) Boat Burial
Located at the highest point of the Parish of Andreas (I don't envy whoever had to drag it ashore and uphill), the KeD burial is strinkingly similar to Balladoole in size and the types of grave goods recovered, despite being located on the opposite end of Man.
So lovely to be at the #SAMuseum for the launch of the Treasures of the Viking Age exhibition, opened by @ntlmuseumsscot.bsky.social's Dr Martin Goldberg, who spoke about the #GallowayHoard as the wealth of the community.
The last big 'reveal' of the Unwrapping the Galloway Hoard AHRC-funded project: the reading of the long runic inscription. Proud to say I played a small part in cracking it by spotting the two puncts around the final rune. The Hoard has now begun its worid tour! www.theguardian.com/science/2025...
The Balladoole Boat Burial
Built into what were likely the ramparts of an Iron Age hill fort and displacing several earlier, Christian graves (maybe by accident…maybe not), Balladoole is one of the largest boat burials found in Northern Britain.
So grateful to have finally seen it in-person 🙏
Balladoole Boat Burial rivet recording. The first step in a long, long process to understand the Manx boat burials better.
(Not sped up. I’m just a very, very fast recorder).
📍 Manx Museum, Douglas