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Monuments and Landscape in Atlantic Europe, Scarre

Monuments and Landscape in Atlantic Europe, Scarre

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<< Our Photo Pages >> Royal Cornwall Museum - Museum in England in Cornwall

Submitted by AngieLake on Friday, 23 September 2022  Page Views: 11744

MuseumsSite Name: Royal Cornwall Museum
Country: England County: Cornwall Type: Museum
Nearest Town: Truro
Map Ref: SW824448  Landranger Map Number: 204
Latitude: 50.262996N  Longitude: 5.054472W
Condition:
5Perfect
4Almost Perfect
3Reasonable but with some damage
2Ruined but still recognisable as an ancient site
1Pretty much destroyed, possibly visible as crop marks
0No data.
-1Completely destroyed
4 Ambience:
5Superb
4Good
3Ordinary
2Not Good
1Awful
0No data.
4 Access:
5Can be driven to, probably with disabled access
4Short walk on a footpath
3Requiring a bit more of a walk
2A long walk
1In the middle of nowhere, a nightmare to find
0No data.
5 Accuracy:
5co-ordinates taken by GPS or official recorded co-ordinates
4co-ordinates scaled from a detailed map
3co-ordinates scaled from a bad map
2co-ordinates of the nearest village
1co-ordinates of the nearest town
0no data
3

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I have visited· I would like to visit

jimstone would like to visit

Catrinm visited on 8th Sep 2021 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 3 Access: 4 Worth a visit - under threat of closure?

lucasn visited - their rating: Cond: 5 Amb: 3 Access: 5

LiveAndrew AngieLake Andy B have visited here

Average ratings for this site from all visit loggers: Condition: 4.5 Ambience: 3 Access: 4.5

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by Andy B : Gold lunalae in the 'Gathering Light' Bronze Age gold exhibition running until the 5th November at the Royal Cornwall Museum, Truro. (Vote or comment on this photo)
Important collections from all periods from Stone Age Cornwall to Contemporary Art. Metalwork, prehistoric gold, pottery, stone and flint tools. Also an extensive mineral collection rooted in Cornwall's mining heritage.

Address: River Street, TR1 2SJ
Phone: 01872 272205
Opening Hours: Monday to Saturday 10am – 5pm. Closed Sundays & Bank Holidays
Admission: Charge
Visit their web site

Page originally by Vicky

Note: Gold lunalae in the 'Gathering Light' Bronze Age gold exhibition running until the 5th November at the Royal Cornwall Museum, Truro.
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Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : The St Mawes Tin Ingot. "Arguably the most famous object ever found in Cornwall is this ingot of pure tin recovered in 1812 by bargemen ..... in Carrick Roads between St Mawes and St Just-in-Roseland. ... Dates attributed to it have ranged from the prehistoric to the mediaeval." (Vote or comment on this photo)

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by Andy B : 'Celtic' heads from St Piran’s Oratory including the rather wonderful cat-like one (Vote or comment on this photo)

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by Andy B : 'Celtic' heads from St Piran’s Oratory (Vote or comment on this photo)

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by Andy B : Lots and lots of pots and urns (Vote or comment on this photo)

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by Andy B : Bronze Axe display (Vote or comment on this photo)

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by Andy B : The Towednack Hoard (left) on loan from the British Museum

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by Andy B : Swords and axes from the 'Gathering Light' Bronze Age gold exhibition running until the 5th November at the Royal Cornwall Museum, Truro.

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by Andy B : Artefacts including bronze axe mould from the 'Gathering Light' Bronze Age gold exhibition running until the 5th November at the Royal Cornwall Museum, Truro.

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by Andy B : Exquisite detailing on this 4000yo gold collar/lunula in the Royal Cornwall Museum, Truro. Zigzag and triangle designs show clear connections with Ireland and France. Forensic examination of the toolmarks tell they were crafted by the same artist.

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : The Royal Cornwall Museum, photographed in May 2015.

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : Padstow Obby Oss ('hobby horse' for those unfamiliar with shortened form) Childrens' mask on display at Royal Cornwall Museum. The May Day 'Obby 'Oss processions and dances at Padstow in Cornwall are one of the longest-surviving folklore celebrations welcoming the coming of summer in Britain today. There are two adult Oss/es?, the 'blue ribbon' and 'red ribbon', with their own meeting places, an... (2 comments)

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : The Carnanton Tin Ingot [Roman]. "... found in the valley a short distance up-stream of St Mawgan-in-Pydar where tin streamers in the early 19th century recovered from their workings several prehistoric objects dating back to the Bronze Age."

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : A beautiful chunk of 'Marmolite Serpentine' from Goonhilly. There is such a lot of Serpentine in the Lizard area of Cornwall and it comes in several different colours. (See any gift shop!) I wonder if the ancient people who erected Dry Tree menhir were aware of serpentine similar to this lovely specimen?

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : Capped Quartz. One of the most intriguing stones I've seen, with its neatly fitting cap. "...the layers pull apart because they are separated by a coating of iron oxide. The best British examples were from this mine." [Virtuous Lady mine, Buckland Monachorum, Devon, about 3 miles from the Cornwall border.]

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : Foreground - Red Jasper from the Ding Dong mine, Madron. (This is the engine house visible from Men an Tol and neighbouring sites.) I wondered if the ancient builders of those circles and tombs might have possessed this red rock and, with its similarity to 'blood red', used it in their ceremonies, or treasured/traded it as something 'special'.

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : Slipper Ore. This must have amazed and mystified the ancient people, looking, as they do, so much like footwear. (This sample was the size of a normal adult slipper.) "....the most celebrated specimens from this mine [Virtuous Lady Mine, Buckland Monachorum] are epimorphs of chalybite which grew around thin blade-like crystals of selenite or baryte which has weathered away." "The name... de...

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : A tin crushing stone. "Large slabs of granite and greenstone pitted with hollows are found in the mining districts. These are anvils on which lumps of tin stone were crushed by hand-held stones or mullers. Many such slabs are mediaeval, but some could be much older. Where this granite example came from is not known, but like many others it was used on the front and the back. A fine large gra... (1 comment)

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : This was a model of Chysauster late Iron Age/ Romano-British village at Newmill between St Ives and Penzance, I think.

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : The 'cats' head, left, was the original one taken from St Pirans Oratory, Perranzabuloe. Three other heads on display are replicas. (1 comment)

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : St Pirans Oratory, Perranzabuloe, now buried under the sand and marked with a plaque and stone. (See site page for St Pirans Cross).

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : The St Mawes Tin Ingot info board.

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : "The Rialton Stone, an inscribed memorial stone from Rialton Barton, St Columb Minor, which probably marked a Christian burial at or near Rialton. The top of the stone with the name of the person buried is missing. The early 6th-century Latin inscription reads: BONEMIMORI (missing name) (F)ILLI TRIBUNI which can be translated as: "In loving memory of (name), of a son of Tribunus". The vertica...

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : Display panel with details of the Rialton Stone (from Rialton Baron, St Columb Minor), and also photos of South Hill Memorial Stone (in a churchyard near Launceston) bottom left, and the Drustanus stone or Menabilly Memorial Stone bottom right. "Drustanus is the oldest recorded instance of the name we know as 'Tristan' which gives us another reason to argue that the Tristan and Isult story orig...

Royal Cornwall Museum
Royal Cornwall Museum submitted by AngieLake : Antler pick - a tinner's tool dug up in 1790 from the deep Carnon Tin Stream Devoran. Dates from the earliest Bronze Age. (1 comment)

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 141m NE 43° Truro Cathedral Celtic Cross* Early Christian Sculptured Stone (SW825449)
 446m WNW 294° St Domnu's Well* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SW820450)
 1.1km NNW 331° Kenwyn* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SW819458)
 1.8km NE 49° Truro Eastern District Centre Neolithic Enclosure* Causewayed Enclosure (SW838459)
 2.8km ESE 120° Malpas Tumulus* Round Barrow(s) (SW848433)
 2.8km ESE 106° Ignioc Stone* Ancient Cross (SW851439)
 3.1km ESE 107° St Clement's Well* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SW853438)
 3.3km WNW 290° Penventinnie Round* Ancient Village or Settlement (SW79374603)
 4.0km N 5° Bishops Wood Fort* Hillfort (SW82914873)
 4.4km WNW 287° Bosvisack Round* Hillfort (SW78254624)
 4.6km SSE 161° Round Wood* Promontory Fort / Cliff Castle (SW83754038)
 5.2km SSW 208° Carnon Downs Barrow* Round Barrow(s) (SW79754036)
 5.5km SSE 155° Tolverne Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SW845397)
 6.1km W 267° Saveock Water Archaeology Modern Stone Circle etc (SW76324476)
 6.1km S 179° Feock Holy Well* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SW8229038664)
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 6.4km S 177° Feock Church Cross* Ancient Cross (SW8248038417)
 7.1km WNW 296° Kenwyn Four Burrows* Barrow Cemetery (SW762482)
 7.5km ESE 109° St Ruan's Well (Ruan Lanihorne)* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SW894421)
 7.5km SW 214° St Piran's Well* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SW779388)
 8.8km NW 325° Caer Dane* Ancient Village or Settlement (SW777522)
 8.8km NNW 329° Caer Kief* Ancient Village or Settlement (SW782525)
 9.0km ENE 57° Ventonglidder Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SW9015149402)
 9.1km W 281° Two Burrows Round Barrow* Round Barrow(s) (SW735469)
 9.3km SE 139° Dingerein Castle* Ancient Village or Settlement (SW88183752)
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Cornovia: Ancient Sites of Cornwall and Scilly, Craig Weatherhill

Cornovia: Ancient Sites of Cornwall and Scilly, Craig Weatherhill

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Talk:Conserving Cornwall's Past - Protecting and Managing Monuments,21st July by coldrum on Saturday, 04 July 2009
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Talk:Conserving Cornwall's Past - Protecting and Managing Monuments,21st July

Lunchtime Archaeology Lectures: Conserving Cornwall's Past - Protecting and Managing Monuments

Tue 21 July 13.00-14.00

Description: The Royal Cornwall Museum is hosting two fascinating lectures by Senior Archaeologists at Cornwall's Historic Environment Service. On July 21st Ann Preston-Jones will explore the issues around protecting and managing Cornwall's extensive network of monuments. On July 28th Jacky Nowakowski will look at Cornwall's surfing capital Newquay and it's less well known prehistoric past. Both talks are free but places are limited to 20 so booking is advised.

Organiser: Royal Institution of Cornwall

Contact: Reception Desk

Telephone: 01872 272205 ex 0

http://festival.britarch.ac.uk/whatson#
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