Series H sceats are among the most geographically grounded of all early Anglo-Saxon silver issues, with Type 39 specifically associated with Hamwic — the middle Saxon trading settlement beneath modern Southampton. Excavations there have produced more sceats per square metre than almost any other site in England, a density that reflects Hamwic's role as a controlled emporium rather than an organic market town. The settlement was likely established under royal West Saxon authority specifically to regulate cross-Channel trade with Frankish merchants.
The series runs through several die-linked sub-varieties traceable across the SCBI Abramson corpus, and provenance from excavation contexts remains the most reliable guide to attribution.
Series H sceats are among the most geographically grounded of all early Anglo-Saxon silver issues, with Type 39 specifically associated with Hamwic — the middle Saxon trading settlement beneath modern Southampton. Excavations there have produced more sceats per square metre than almost any other site in England, a density that reflects Hamwic's role as a controlled emporium rather than an organic market town. The settlement was likely established under royal West Saxon authority specifically to regulate cross-Channel trade with Frankish merchants.
The series runs through several die-linked sub-varieties traceable across the SCBI Abramson corpus, and provenance from excavation contexts remains the most reliable guide to attribution.