

Many of the more than 1,800 urns that have been excavated from the site are intricately decorated with incised or stamped patterns, but this vessel is unique in that its upper surface is also marked with a string of runic letters, cut into the clay while it was still soft. Luda’s brooch (better known as the ‘Harford Farm brooch’) provides one of these fleeting echoes another example, earlier still, is a funerary urn from the great early Anglo-Saxon cremation cemetery at Loveden Hill, Lincolnshire. Image: The Trustees of the British Museum. This early Anglo-Saxon urn from Loveden Hill, Lincolnshire, is one of only around 20 objects marked with runes known from England that pre-date AD 650. Yet we can still find traces of their words in the archaeological record: around 20 objects bearing runic inscriptions that pre-date c.AD 650 have been found in England so far. Was it his workmanship that he was so proud of, though, or his literacy? Although the early medieval period would later see the flowering of a sophisticated English literary culture (of which more anon), the early Anglo-Saxons have left precious few surviving written sources to examine today. (Clearly someone still valued the brooch, despite its marred appearance.) The craftsman too seems to have been happy with his work, proudly signing his name on the back of the artefact in a short runic inscription that reads ‘Luda repaired the brooch’. Unfortunately, he bodged the job – the marks of his clumsy repair can still be clearly seen on the object, which has survived the centuries thanks to it later being buried in a woman’s grave in Norfolk, in the late 7th century. Fixing such a fine ornament would require all the skill and artistry at the medieval metalworker’s disposal. This was a strikingly beautiful object, adorned with complex patterns of gleaming red garnets, that was probably made in Kent, where other similar composite brooches are known. In the early 7th century, an Anglo-Saxon craftsman set about repairing the damaged lower panels of an ornate gold disc brooch.
