The face of a girl who died more than 1.300 years ago was revealed thanks to facial reconstruction.
Her skeleton was found buried on a wooden bed, with a cross of gold and a garnet on his chest in Trumpington, Cambridgeshire, 2012.
The image will be displayed as a part exhibitions of the University of Cambridge.
PhD Sam Leggett said that "as an archaeologist she's used to faceless people" so it was "really wonderful" to see what she might have looked like.
Forensic artist Hugh Morrison reconstructed the image by measuring the young woman's skull and using information about the depth of the white woman's tissue.
"Her left eye was slightly lower, about half a centimeter, than her right eye - which would have been quite noticeable in life," she said.
New specialist analysis of the bones and teeth of a seventh-century teenage girl has revealed more about her short life.
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She was born near the Alps, probably in southern Germany, and at some point moved to the flat moors of Cambridgeshire after she turned seven.
In addition, her diet changed when she came to England.
Leggett said: "We now know that the proportion of protein has decreased, suggesting that she ate more meat and dairy products when she was in southern Germany than when she arrived in Trumpington."
Cambridge University studies published last year found that Anglo-Saxon kings were mostly vegetarian before the Vikings settled.
The researchers already knew from previous analyzes that she was suffering from an unknown disease before her death.
Dr Leggett, who helped carry out isotopic analysis at the University of Cambridge before moving to the University of Edinburgh, said:
"She must have been quite unwell, she'd come a long way to someplace completely unknown, even the food was different - it must have been terrible."
This is one of 18 grave beds discovered so far in Great Britain, while the gold and garnet cross indicate its Christian, but also aristocratic or royal origin.
Leggett said research into European bed burials "really suggests the movement of a small group of young elite women from a mountainous area in continental Europe to the Cambridge region in the second half of the seventh century".
A woman could arrive in a new climate as a bride or join a monastic house such as nearby Ely Abbey, so she was part of "pan-European networks of elite women who were heavily involved in the early church."
"She's a wonderful example of bringing the past to life," Leggett added.
Artifacts found with the tomb, such as the "Trumpington Cross" and a decorative headboard, will be displayed in the exhibition.
It explores the traces of where people lived, worked and died for thousands of years in Cambridgeshire.
Other exhibits include ceramic and textile finds from "British Pompeii" - Mast farms and a young friar's ivory belt buckle found at the cemetery of the Augustinian monastery in Cambridge.
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