9th Century Anglo Saxon home discovered by archaeologists in Derbyshire

ITV News Correspondent Ben Chapman explores the Anglo-Saxon dwelling discovered in Derbyshire


A sandstone cave once thought to be 18th century follies has been discovered as a near-complete Anglo-Saxo dwelling, believed to date from the early ninth century.

The new study demonstrates the caves are more likely to be early Medieval in date.

Archaeologists from the Royal Agricultural University’s (RAU) newly-formed Cultural Heritage Institute, working with colleagues from Wessex Archaeology, conducted a detailed survey of the grade II listed Anchor Church Caves between Foremark and Ingleby in south Derbyshire.

Edmund Simons, principal investigator of the project and a research fellow at the RAU, said: “Our findings demonstrate that this odd little rock-cut building in Derbyshire is more likely from the 9th century than from the 18th century as everyone had originally thought.

“This makes it probably the oldest intact domestic interior in the UK – with doors, floor, roof, windows etc – and, what’s more, it may well have been lived in by a king who became a saint.

“Using detailed measurements, a drone survey, and a study of architectural details, it was possible to reconstruct the original plan of three rooms and easterly facing oratory, or chapel, with three apses.”

Researchers say the narrow doorways and windows of the rooms in the dwellings closely resemble Saxon architecture.

While a rock-cut pillar is similar to those found in the Saxon crypt at nearby Repton which is believed to have been completed by the Mercian King Wiglaf who reigned as King of Mercia – a kingdom in the English Midlands from the sixth century to the 10th century – from 827 until his death in 839.

The interior of Anchor Church Caves between Foremark and Ingleby in south Derbyshire.

Caves, such as the Anchor Church Caves, are often associated with anonymous medieval hermits or anchorites.

However, the researchers say in this case there is a legendary association between the Anchor Church Caves and Saint Hardulph.

A fragment of a 16th century printed book states that at “that time Saint Hardulph has a cell in a cliff a little from the Trent” and local folklore identifies these caves as those Hardulph occupied.

Modern scholarship identifies Hardulph with King Eardwulf who was deposed as king of Northumbria in 806.

Hardulph died in around 830 and was buried at Breedon on the Hill in Leicestershire, just five miles from the caves.

It is believed that some of the surviving sculpture in the village’s Church of St Mary and St Hardulph, which was founded as a monastery in the seventh century, came from his shrine.

Mr Simons said: “The architectural similarities with Saxon buildings, and the documented association with Hardulph/Eardwulf, make a convincing case that these caves were constructed, or enlarged, to house the exiled king.

“It was not unusual for deposed or retired royalty to take up a religious life during this period, gaining sanctity and in some cases canonisation.

“Living in a cave as a hermit would have been one way this could have been achieved.

“These cave dwellings have often been overlooked by historians but may be the only intact domestic building to have survived from the Saxon period.

“This project has so far identified more than 20 other sites in the West Midlands that could date from as early as the 5th century.”