List of Objects
Telling a history of our world through objects
Click on the titles in the blue bar below [Location, Theme, Contributor Type, etc.] and then choose a category to see a list of objects - e.g. click Theme and then click War. (All objects have been classified by their contributor.)
You can also chose to see objects from a particular time period by clicking on the dates in the box below.
To start again and see all the objects, click this link: Start again
800 - 1200
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William 1st Silver Penny
Our family (Sweatman) emanated from the City of Oxford in England where we have two records from the Doomsday Book of ...
Contributed by Individual
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The Domesday Book
The Domesday Book is The National Archives' oldest and most famous public record. It is a highly detailed survey and ...
Contributed by Museum
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Sacred Spring – The Roman Baths
At the very heart of the site is the Sacred Spring. Hot water at a temperature of 46°C rises here at the rate of ...
Contributed by Individual
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The Cross Bath, Thermae Bath Spa
Where the Cross Bath now stands, the Celts revered their goddess Sul, in whose honour the Romans named their spa town, ...
Contributed by Individual
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Lostwithiel's crucifixion figure
THIS OBJECT IS PART OF THE PROJECT 'A HISTORY OF CORNWALL IN 100 OBJECTS'.
LOSTWITHIEL MUSEUM. This important example ...
Contributed by Museum
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Norman silver penny
THIS OBJECT IS PART OF THE PROJECT 'A HISTORY OF CORNWALL IN 100 OBJECTS'.
LAWRENCE HOUSE MUSEUM LAUNCESTON. A ...
Contributed by Museum
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Vikings in the Yorkshire Dales
This is an elaborate and rare form of 9th or 10th century Viking gold ring. It was found during the excavation of a ...
Contributed by Museum
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Pagan Lady's Necklace
A brightly coloured, thousand year old, glass bead necklace. Worn by a Viking domestic goddess?
Contributed by Museum
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The Bangor Bell
Celtic cross and scrollwork
Contributed by Museum
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11c depiction of English village
A cartulary dated 1444 was produced for Edmund Rede of Boarstall in Buckinghamshire. We are descendants of Edmund. ...
Contributed by Individual
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An Aboriginal tool of petrified wood.
Whilst staying in Andamooka, South Australia, in 1966, searching for opals around the mouth of an opal mine ...
Contributed by Individual
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An Aboriginal tool of petrified wood.
In 1966 whilst staying in the opal-mining area of Andamooka,South Australia, looking for opals around the mouth of an ...
Contributed by Individual
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A series of bone whistles
Bone whistles are the most ancient musical instruments known. Six bone whistles have been found from archaeological ...
Contributed by Museum
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A fragment of a Norman capital
Four human faces have been carved into this block of stone, each with a moustache and wearing a hat. Originally it was a ...
Contributed by Museum
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A fragment of a Norman doorway
This carved stone block shows two heads with bulging eyes. The man on the right has a beard and moustache. The shape of ...
Contributed by Museum
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The first seal of the Chapter of Exeter
This is a seal impression which was attached to an official document. The earliest example of the use of this seal is on ...
Contributed by Museum
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The Common Seal of Exeter
This silver seal is the oldest example surviving from any of the towns and cities of England, and dates to around 1170 - ...
Contributed by Museum
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Fragment of Saxon cross
Kingston upon Thames, or Cyninges-tun as it was known in Saxon times, plays an important part in Anglo-Saxon history, ...
Contributed by Individual
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Priory Gatehouse gateposts
The Priory Gatehouse, a scheduled Ancient Monument and Grade 2 Listed Building, was the entrance to Great Malvern ...
Contributed by Museum
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The Viking Hoard from Moan, Orkney
This small hoard was found in Orkney in 1886. It contained glass and amber beads, a spoon and a Celtic harness mount ...
Contributed by Museum
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Alabaster Bedesman
This object is part of one of the effigies from the local church in Abergavenny. It's an alabaster bedesman. A bedesman ...
Contributed by Museum
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Hoa Hakananai'a Easter Island statue
Moai statue from the Island of Rapa Nui, (Easter Island), one of the most remote inhabited islands in the world
Contributed by The British Museum
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Silver penny of Robert de Stuteville
This extremely rare silver penny of the Yorkshire baron, Robert de Stuteville, is also the best surviving example known. ...
Contributed by Museum
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Silver penny of the Norman King, Henry I
The reign of Henry I is notable for the deteriorating standard of coin manufacture and lots of forgeries were made. In ...
Contributed by Museum
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Silver penny of William The Conqueror
On this very rare penny, minted between 1066 and 1068, we see the bust of William The Conqueror, wearing a crown and ...
Contributed by Museum
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Log Boat
This log boat or ‘dug out canoe’ was found in 1925 on the bed of Llangors Lake, Brecon. It has been radiocarbon dated to ...
Contributed by Museum
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Norman carving of a dog chasing its tail
Excavated in Canterbury in the 1980s, this carving may have been part of the early decoration of the Cathedral...
Contributed by Museum
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The Exon Domesday Book
The 'Exon Domesday' manuscript is a unique survival from William the Conqueror's Domesday Survey of 1086. It contains ...
Contributed by Museum
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The Temple Pyx
During the Middle Ages, relics of Christ's Passion and of the Virgin and the saints were scattered throughout Western ...
Contributed by Museum
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Lloyd's Bank Turd from York © YAT
In 1972 York Archaeological Trust discovered a human stool (fæces), which dated from Viking-Age York. A very rare find ...
Contributed by Museum
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A Viking Sock from Coppergate, York ©YAT
A woollen sock recovered at Coppergate was made using a technique known in Scandinavia as nålebinding; in English we ...
Contributed by Museum
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Saxon Tanged Iron Sword
1 iron sword with scabbard remains, from Grave 22, from the pagan Saxon cemetery called 'Black Patch' at Blacknall ...
Contributed by Museum
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Lewis Chessmen
Found on Lewis in 1831, they are probably the most well-known archaeological find from Scotland. The chess pieces ...
Contributed by Museum
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Lewis Chessmen
Chessmen found in Scotland, for playing a game from India that was brought to Christian Europe via the Islamic world
Contributed by The British Museum
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Hedwig glass beaker
Glass beaker from central Europe probably made by a Muslim craftsman in Syria or Egypt during the Crusades
Contributed by The British Museum
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Viking silver ingot
Leicestershire was part of the Danelaw and Leicester was one of the 'five buroughs' along with Derby, Nottingham, ...
Contributed by Museum
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Norman Cooking Pot
A cooking pot made in the Malvern area in the eleventh-twelfth century, found in excavations in Hereford. It shows the ...
Contributed by Museum
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Maya relief of royal blood-letting
Maya temple carving of Lady Kab'al Xook, piercing her tongue to induce pain and provoke a visionary trance
Contributed by The British Museum
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Borobudur Buddha head
Head of a Buddha statue from Borobudur in Java, one of the largest Buddhist monuments in the world
Contributed by The British Museum
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Japanese bronze mirror
Bronze mirror decorated with dancing cranes found in a pool at a Japanese shrine where it was thrown as an offering
Contributed by The British Museum
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Vale of York Hoard
Hoard of Viking silver probably gathered from across Europe, discovered in 2007 buried in North Yorkshire
Contributed by The British Museum
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Harem wall painting fragments
Fragments of a wall-painting of women from the caliph's palace in Samara, one of the Islamic Empire's great cities
Contributed by The British Museum
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Korean roof tile
Roof tile intended to scare evil spirits from a house in the magnificent ancient Korean capital city of Kyongju
Contributed by The British Museum
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Pot with hands
Borys Malkin, the anthropologist, used our family home as a storage depot. This is possibly a burial pot and was part ...
Contributed by Individual
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Vertical horned mask
This was bought in 1945 at Brighton. This fish suggests that it has an early Christian connection. The mask could have ...
Contributed by Individual
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Abolhassan Kharaghani, moselium plack
Abolhassan Kharaghani had this message at the entrance of his house "
Whoever enters my place, feed them without asking ...
Contributed by Individual
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Penannular brooch from Ballymoney
This striking silver brooch once fastened the cloak of a wealthy person 1100 years ago. Known as a penannular brooch, it ...
Contributed by Museum
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Lothair Crystal
Crystal engraved with images from the Biblical story of Susanna, made for the Medieval King Lothair
Contributed by The British Museum
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Silk princess painting
Painting from central Asia showing the legend of a princess who smuggled the secret of how to make silk out of China
Contributed by The British Museum
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Replica Runic ring
The inscription on this replica ring is written in the Runic alphabet, used by the Anglo-Saxons who lived in Britain ...
Contributed by Museum