Abstract :
This paper reports on the excavation of a small, but high-status, later seventh-century Anglo-
Saxon cemetery in Ely. Of fifteen graves, two were particularly well furnished, one of which was
buried with a gold and silver necklace that included a cross pendant, as well as two complete glass
palm cups and a composite comb, placed within a wooden padlocked casket. The paper reports on
the skeletal and artefactual material (including isotopic analysis of the burials), and seeks to set
the site in its wider social and historical context, arguing that this cemetery may well have been
associated with the first monastery in Ely, founded by Etheldreda in AD 673.