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Durham University Museum of Archaeology

The Museum of Archaeology, founded in 1833, is the archaeology museum of Durham University in England and was the second university museum in England to be open to the public. It is mostly focused on the archaeology of north east England with some national and international artefacts. The collections range from the prehistoric to the post-medieval, including the internationally important Oswald-Plique collection of Samian ware and the first complete Roman fleet diploma to be found in Britain. It is the repository for development-led archaeology finds in Durham City.

Durham University Museum of Archaeology
Location within Durham, England
Former name
Durham University Museum
Established1833 (1833)
LocationPalace Green, Durham, England
Coordinates54°46′28″N 1°34′35″W / 54.77444°N 1.57639°W / 54.77444; -1.57639
TypeUniversity archaeology museum
AccreditationUK Museum Accreditation Scheme, Arts Council England[1]
Key holdingsOswald-Plique collection, Lanchester diploma
CollectionsPrehistoric, Ancient Greek, Roman, early medieval, medieval, post-medieval
Visitors30,000[2]
CuratorGemma Lewis[3]
OwnerDurham University
Websitewww.dur.ac.uk/archaeology.museum/

The Museum of Archaeology is part of Durham University Museums, Galleries and Exhibitions, along with Durham Castle Museum and Durham University Oriental Museum.[4]

History edit

 
The Old Fulling Mill on the bank of the River Wear, home of the museum from 1833 to 1876 and 1975 to 2014

In 1833, the year the university opened, the Old Fulling Mill on the River Wear below Durham Cathedral became the university museum.[5] It was the second university museum in England to be open to the public.[6][a] In 1876 it moved to Bishop Cosin's Almshouses on Palace Green.[9] The early collection included a large number of natural history specimens, including "an almost complete collection of British birds", many donated by Thomas Gisborne, along with Roman artefacts from Binchester.[10] In 1892, The Antiquary praised the Binchester collection as being "of first-class archaeological value" but concluded that overall "their museum reflects no credit on the University of Durham".[11]

At the start of the first world war, Durham's lecturer theatres were commandeered and the museum was converted to a temporary lecture theatre.[12] The building had never been satisfactory as a museum, so it was decided to rationalise the collection, disposing of some of the more eclectic items of little educational value and moving the others to where they would be most useful. The collection of British birds went to St Hild's College, other scientific specimens to the science laboratories, the Binchester collection was moved to a room used primarily for lectures in history, and other objects to the university library.[13]

The university appointed Eric Birley as its first lecturer in archaeology in 1931, and he added material to the teaching collection from his excavations at Hadrian's Wall. In 1975, the museum was re-opened in the Old Fulling Mill, now concentrated purely on archaeology, with further galleries being opened in 1986.[2] However, the location was prone to flooding and outside the main tourist areas. In 2014, the museum re-located back to Palace Green, to the Wolfson Gallery within the Durham University Library complex.[5] Since 2021, the research collections have been stored off-site.[2]

Collections edit

 
Two parts of the Lanchester Diploma

The museum's collections cover the prehistoric, Ancient Greek, Roman, early medieval, medieval and post-medieval periods.[14] Items of interest include the Bronze Age Houghall Sword, a Ewart Park sword from 700–900 BC found on the Houghall campus of East Durham College just south of Durham in 1996;[15] the internationally important Oswald-Plique collection of over 4,500 pieces of Samian ware, acquired by Birley in 1950, which formed a reference for Oswald's 1936–7 Index of Figure Types on Terra Sigillata and Stanfield and Simpson's 1958 Central Gaulish Potters, both of which remain standard reference books;[16][17] Roman artefacts from the Victorian excavations at Binchester and Birley's 1930s work at Benwell on Hadrian's Wall;[18] and the Lanchester Diploma, the first complete Roman fleet diploma to be found in Britain, discovered in Lanchester, County Durham, by a detectorist in 2016.[17][19][20]

The bulk of the collection is from development-led archaeology, with the museum being the repository for archaeology carried out in advance of construction in Durham City and the surrounding parishes.[18][21] These include bone fragments of Durhams earliest known resident, carbon dated to between 90BC and 60AD, that were found at 18-29 Claypath in 2016–17 prior to the construction of student residences on the site;[22] as well as one of the UK's largest collections of post-medieval glass, with over 100 bottles from the 17th and 18th centuries recovered from earlier excavations on Claypath in the 1990s.[18][23]

 
Silver denarius of Emperor Caracalla from the Piercebridge assemblage, deliberately cut in three directions

The collection also includes the Piercebridge River Assemblage, over 4,000 Roman artefacts recovered from where Dere Street crossed the River Tees, thought to be mostly votive offerings thrown from the bridges;[18][24] and the Durham River Wear Assemblage, over 13,500 objects recovered from the River Wear below the 12th-century Elvet Bridge;[14][25][26] as well as archives and finds from the Durham City Survey.[23]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The first was the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford in 1683;[7] Cambridge's Fitzwilliam Museum would not open to the public until 1848[8]

References edit

  1. ^ "About Accreditation: List of Accredited Museums". Arts Council England. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  2. ^ a b c "History of the Museum". Durham University Museum of Archaology. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
  3. ^ "Our Staff". Durham University Library and Collections. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
  4. ^ "Museums, Galleries and Exhibitions". Durham University. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
  5. ^ a b Mark Tallentire (13 March 2013). "Archaeology museum on the banks of the River Wear is on the move". The Northern Echo.
  6. ^ Mark Tallentire (6 October 2008). "It's amazing what turns up in the attic". The Northern Echo.
  7. ^ "History of the Ashmolean". Ashmolean. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  8. ^ "Our History". Fitzwilliam Museum. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  9. ^ Joseph Thomas Fowler (1904). Durham University: Earlier Foundations and Present Colleges. F. E. Robinson. p. 65.
  10. ^ Joseph Thomas Fowler (1904). Durham University: Earlier Foundations and Present Colleges. F. E. Robinson. pp. 102–103.
  11. ^ Roach le Schonix (November 1892). Edward Walford; George Latimer Apperson (eds.). "Notes on Archaeology in Provincial Museums: No. XV – The Durham University Museum". The Antiquary: A Magazine Devoted to the Study of the Past. Vol. 26, no. 35. Elliot Stock. pp. 193–196.
  12. ^ C. E. Whiting (1832). The University of Durham 1832–1932. The Sheldon Press. p. 221.
  13. ^ C. E. Whiting (1832). The University of Durham 1832–1932. The Sheldon Press. p. 288.
  14. ^ a b "About Our Collections". Durham University Museum of Archaeology. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
  15. ^ Rosemary Zakrzewski; Ian A Colquhoun (2016). "The Houghall Sword and Houghall in the Late Bronze Age". Northern Archaeology. Northumberland Archaeological Group. 22: 23–33. doi:10.5284/1101073.
  16. ^ Ashley Barnard (22 June 2022). "Exhibition of Roman artefacts on display at Durham Museum". The Northern Echo.
  17. ^ a b "Roman". Durham University Museum of Archaeology. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  18. ^ a b c d "Museums, Galleries and Exhibitions: Museum of Archaeology Collections". Durham University Library. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
  19. ^ Gavin Havery (20 July 2017). "Metal detectorist finds Britain's first Roman Fleet diploma near Lanchester, in County Durham". The Northern Echo.
  20. ^ Tony Henderson (11 July 2017). "Incredible fleet diploma detailing naval career of its holder is unearthed near Roman fort". Chronicle Live.
  21. ^ "Deposit of Archaeological Material". Durham University Museum of Archaeology. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
  22. ^ "Durham archaeological dig reveals 'earliest resident'". BBC News. 11 February 2020.
  23. ^ a b "Post-medieval". Durham University Museum of Archaeology. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
  24. ^ Hella Eckardt; Philippa Walton (4 August 2021). "Bridge over troubled water: Roman finds from the Tees at Piercebridge and beyond". Current Archaeology.
  25. ^ "River Wear excavation yields historical treasures". BBC News. 19 June 2014.
  26. ^ "Durham River Wear Assemblage Project". Durham University Department of Archaeology. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  • Harding, Anthony F. (1982). "Durham University Museum, 1833–1982". Transactions of the Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland. 6: 37–43.
  • Andrews, Matthew Paul (2016). Durham University: Last of the Ancient Universities and First of the New (1831–1871) (DPhil). University of Oxford. pp. 169–172.

External links edit

  • Durham University Museum of Archaeology
  • Museum of Archaeology collections library guide

durham, university, museum, archaeology, museum, archaeology, founded, 1833, archaeology, museum, durham, university, england, second, university, museum, england, open, public, mostly, focused, archaeology, north, east, england, with, some, national, internat. The Museum of Archaeology founded in 1833 is the archaeology museum of Durham University in England and was the second university museum in England to be open to the public It is mostly focused on the archaeology of north east England with some national and international artefacts The collections range from the prehistoric to the post medieval including the internationally important Oswald Plique collection of Samian ware and the first complete Roman fleet diploma to be found in Britain It is the repository for development led archaeology finds in Durham City Durham University Museum of ArchaeologyLocation within Durham EnglandFormer nameDurham University MuseumEstablished1833 1833 LocationPalace Green Durham EnglandCoordinates54 46 28 N 1 34 35 W 54 77444 N 1 57639 W 54 77444 1 57639TypeUniversity archaeology museumAccreditationUK Museum Accreditation Scheme Arts Council England 1 Key holdingsOswald Plique collection Lanchester diplomaCollectionsPrehistoric Ancient Greek Roman early medieval medieval post medievalVisitors30 000 2 CuratorGemma Lewis 3 OwnerDurham UniversityWebsitewww wbr dur wbr ac wbr uk wbr archaeology wbr museum wbr The Museum of Archaeology is part of Durham University Museums Galleries and Exhibitions along with Durham Castle Museum and Durham University Oriental Museum 4 Contents 1 History 2 Collections 3 Notes 4 References 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp The Old Fulling Mill on the bank of the River Wear home of the museum from 1833 to 1876 and 1975 to 2014In 1833 the year the university opened the Old Fulling Mill on the River Wear below Durham Cathedral became the university museum 5 It was the second university museum in England to be open to the public 6 a In 1876 it moved to Bishop Cosin s Almshouses on Palace Green 9 The early collection included a large number of natural history specimens including an almost complete collection of British birds many donated by Thomas Gisborne along with Roman artefacts from Binchester 10 In 1892 The Antiquary praised the Binchester collection as being of first class archaeological value but concluded that overall their museum reflects no credit on the University of Durham 11 At the start of the first world war Durham s lecturer theatres were commandeered and the museum was converted to a temporary lecture theatre 12 The building had never been satisfactory as a museum so it was decided to rationalise the collection disposing of some of the more eclectic items of little educational value and moving the others to where they would be most useful The collection of British birds went to St Hild s College other scientific specimens to the science laboratories the Binchester collection was moved to a room used primarily for lectures in history and other objects to the university library 13 The university appointed Eric Birley as its first lecturer in archaeology in 1931 and he added material to the teaching collection from his excavations at Hadrian s Wall In 1975 the museum was re opened in the Old Fulling Mill now concentrated purely on archaeology with further galleries being opened in 1986 2 However the location was prone to flooding and outside the main tourist areas In 2014 the museum re located back to Palace Green to the Wolfson Gallery within the Durham University Library complex 5 Since 2021 the research collections have been stored off site 2 Collections edit nbsp Two parts of the Lanchester DiplomaThe museum s collections cover the prehistoric Ancient Greek Roman early medieval medieval and post medieval periods 14 Items of interest include the Bronze Age Houghall Sword a Ewart Park sword from 700 900 BC found on the Houghall campus of East Durham College just south of Durham in 1996 15 the internationally important Oswald Plique collection of over 4 500 pieces of Samian ware acquired by Birley in 1950 which formed a reference for Oswald s 1936 7 Index of Figure Types on Terra Sigillata and Stanfield and Simpson s 1958 Central Gaulish Potters both of which remain standard reference books 16 17 Roman artefacts from the Victorian excavations at Binchester and Birley s 1930s work at Benwell on Hadrian s Wall 18 and the Lanchester Diploma the first complete Roman fleet diploma to be found in Britain discovered in Lanchester County Durham by a detectorist in 2016 17 19 20 The bulk of the collection is from development led archaeology with the museum being the repository for archaeology carried out in advance of construction in Durham City and the surrounding parishes 18 21 These include bone fragments of Durhams earliest known resident carbon dated to between 90BC and 60AD that were found at 18 29 Claypath in 2016 17 prior to the construction of student residences on the site 22 as well as one of the UK s largest collections of post medieval glass with over 100 bottles from the 17th and 18th centuries recovered from earlier excavations on Claypath in the 1990s 18 23 nbsp Silver denarius of Emperor Caracalla from the Piercebridge assemblage deliberately cut in three directionsThe collection also includes the Piercebridge River Assemblage over 4 000 Roman artefacts recovered from where Dere Street crossed the River Tees thought to be mostly votive offerings thrown from the bridges 18 24 and the Durham River Wear Assemblage over 13 500 objects recovered from the River Wear below the 12th century Elvet Bridge 14 25 26 as well as archives and finds from the Durham City Survey 23 Notes edit The first was the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford in 1683 7 Cambridge s Fitzwilliam Museum would not open to the public until 1848 8 References edit About Accreditation List of Accredited Museums Arts Council England Retrieved 6 October 2023 a b c History of the Museum Durham University Museum of Archaology Retrieved 4 October 2023 Our Staff Durham University Library and Collections Retrieved 5 October 2023 Museums Galleries and Exhibitions Durham University Retrieved 5 October 2023 a b Mark Tallentire 13 March 2013 Archaeology museum on the banks of the River Wear is on the move The Northern Echo Mark Tallentire 6 October 2008 It s amazing what turns up in the attic The Northern Echo History of the Ashmolean Ashmolean Retrieved 6 October 2023 Our History Fitzwilliam Museum Retrieved 6 October 2023 Joseph Thomas Fowler 1904 Durham University Earlier Foundations and Present Colleges F E Robinson p 65 Joseph Thomas Fowler 1904 Durham University Earlier Foundations and Present Colleges F E Robinson pp 102 103 Roach le Schonix November 1892 Edward Walford George Latimer Apperson eds Notes on Archaeology in Provincial Museums No XV The Durham University Museum The Antiquary A Magazine Devoted to the Study of the Past Vol 26 no 35 Elliot Stock pp 193 196 C E Whiting 1832 The University of Durham 1832 1932 The Sheldon Press p 221 C E Whiting 1832 The University of Durham 1832 1932 The Sheldon Press p 288 a b About Our Collections Durham University Museum of Archaeology Retrieved 4 October 2023 Rosemary Zakrzewski Ian A Colquhoun 2016 The Houghall Sword and Houghall in the Late Bronze Age Northern Archaeology Northumberland Archaeological Group 22 23 33 doi 10 5284 1101073 Ashley Barnard 22 June 2022 Exhibition of Roman artefacts on display at Durham Museum The Northern Echo a b Roman Durham University Museum of Archaeology Retrieved 6 October 2023 a b c d Museums Galleries and Exhibitions Museum of Archaeology Collections Durham University Library Retrieved 5 October 2023 Gavin Havery 20 July 2017 Metal detectorist finds Britain s first Roman Fleet diploma near Lanchester in County Durham The Northern Echo Tony Henderson 11 July 2017 Incredible fleet diploma detailing naval career of its holder is unearthed near Roman fort Chronicle Live Deposit of Archaeological Material Durham University Museum of Archaeology Retrieved 4 October 2023 Durham archaeological dig reveals earliest resident BBC News 11 February 2020 a b Post medieval Durham University Museum of Archaeology Retrieved 5 October 2023 Hella Eckardt Philippa Walton 4 August 2021 Bridge over troubled water Roman finds from the Tees at Piercebridge and beyond Current Archaeology River Wear excavation yields historical treasures BBC News 19 June 2014 Durham River Wear Assemblage Project Durham University Department of Archaeology Retrieved 6 October 2023 Harding Anthony F 1982 Durham University Museum 1833 1982 Transactions of the Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland 6 37 43 Andrews Matthew Paul 2016 Durham University Last of the Ancient Universities and First of the New 1831 1871 DPhil University of Oxford pp 169 172 External links editDurham University Museum of Archaeology Museum of Archaeology collections library guide Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Durham University Museum of Archaeology amp oldid 1182561291, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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