06/08/2019
Free
Event information
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Time

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Free

Gallery 21

Who

Tuesday - Saturday: 10:00 - 17:00
Sundays & Bank Holidays: 12:00 - 17:00
Closed Good Friday, 24-26 & 31 December and 1 January

The University’s West Cambridge development has proved enormously fruitful for Cambridge Archaeological Unit (CAU), particularly the North West Cambridge site, now renamed Eddington. CAU has been digging on-site for almost 20 years and the extraordinary insights into the area’s prehistoric and Roman past, plus the many Anglo-Saxon, medieval and 20th century finds are of global archaeological significance.

This display celebrates this incredible work and represents the thousands of objects that have been found over the years.

The research team found seven Late Iron Age/Roman farmstead, five cemeteries, and an impressive Late Roman villa complex that includes an enormous aisled timber hall and a stone bathhouse.

On display, mosaic floor fragments (tesserae) give a flavour of what conditions may have been like under foot in the villa. There’s also a highly decorated Roman ceramic container, probably used to store a loved one’s ashes after cremation, as well as coins, a pair of tweezers, and a copper alloy ‘Toilet Spoon’ – not as ‘ew’ as it sounds –  it was possibly used to scrap out highly prized oils and ointments from delicate Roman bottles.

The Fitzwilliam display is showcasing the single most important find to date at the North West Cambridge development site.  A tightly rolled 12-13th century pewter or lead seal, which when unravelled revealed a king with a fleur de lis-topped sceptre. Researchers speculate that the piece may have been a ritualistic offering.

All in all, this single case display tells a long story of local and worldwide importance.

Museum Opening Times

Tuesday - Saturday: 10:00 - 17:00
Sundays & Bank Holidays: 12:00 - 17:00
Closed Good Friday, 24-26 & 31 December and 1 January