I <hic> Shtill cant remember where I left the boat! <hic>
I pity the poor Viking, coming back after a hard days pillaging and losing his boat, only to find someones built 'Ye Olde Pub ' in its place.
A team from Nottingham University's archaeology department believes it has rediscovered the remains of an intact Viking boat under a Merseyside pub - originally unearthed in the 1930s by builders excavating the boozer's basement, but quickly reburied because they feared "an archaeological dig would disrupt their work". …
This post has been deleted by its author
I'm reminded of that old Nigel Kneale drama, "The Stone Tape"; perhaps this pub echoes to the psychic emanations of drunken Vikings. Drunken scouse Vikings. From hundreds of years before the dawn of Guinness. No-one knows why they were there, or what they were doin'. Perhaps they're coming to take us away on mystery tour in their magical swirling ship.
Yeah, yeah... who nicked the mast?
As a local person - seriously, though - old news. I remember some ancient & revered knowledge of this being under the Railway Inn's car park. The only new bit in the whole BBC Merseyside article (presumably where the Reg sourced it from - now the scousers are getting their stuff nicked by southerners, eh? ;-D ) - that Prof. Harding's team pinpointed the exact location using a GPR device. A rather whizzo combination of new tech & old knowledge.
'For God's sake cover it up. We don't want an archaeological dig to stop the build.'
Best thing that could've happened to it. Archaeologists in the 1930s would have made a pig's breakfast of the thing, missing loads of interesting remains. In fact, unless there's a pressing need to remove the ship, e.g. because it'll be destroyed by imminent building works, it's best to leave it alone until it needs shifting, simply because excavation & recovery techniques will have improved in the future. As any archaeologist will tell you, this is the best excuse you can have for being a shiftless layabout.
"it's best to leave it alone until it needs shifting, simply because excavation & recovery techniques will have improved in the future."
That may always be true. In which case it would neve be dug up.
I agree about the 1930s (Indiana Jones and the Viking Longship), but I can't see a problem with excavating it now..
Apparently they are now calling for an enquiry as to how it came to go aground and who was to blame, blah blah blah... The union of rapists and pillagers expect that any of their members discovered to be on the boat will be cleared of wrongdoing as they were all about to go on duty at the time.