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Discover all the exclusive benefits of membership so you can make sure you get the most out of being an English Heritage Member.
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Muchelney Abbey was once a wealthy Benedictine house and the second oldest religious foundation in Somerset, but as part of the dissolution the abbey’s principal buildings were demolished by Henry VIII in 1538. Pupils can still see the clearly laid out foundations of the abbey, parts of the richly decorated cloister walk and thatched monks’ lavatory - the only one of its kind in Britain. There is also a display of artefacts found at the Abbey, a brilliant resource to illustrate monastic life to your students.
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Gainsborough Old Hall Bursary Scheme Terms and Conditions
These terms and conditions apply to all education visits using the Gainsborough Hall Bursary Scheme. For the purposes of these terms and conditions, “English Heritage” means the English Heritage Trust, a charity caring for the National Heritage Collection of more than 400 historic properties and their collections. The English Heritage Trust is incorporated and registered in England and Wales with company number 07447221 and charity number 1140351 whose registered office is at the Engine House, Fire Fly Avenue, SN2 2EH
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What is it like to work in an archive?
Have you ever wondered what happens to all the objects found on archaeological digs? Or where collections that aren’t on display are held? We spoke to Rose Arkle, the Collections Archive Assistant at the Wrest Park Collections Store to find out more about what goes on behind the scenes, and what it takes to start working in an archive.
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The English Heritage home fragrance and toiletries range has been created under licence by Home County Candle Co. Our candles celebrate England’s natural landscapes that surround our properties and celebrate our commitment to conserving natural habitats. The candles themselves are 100% natural soy wax and are hand-poured in Buckinghamshire.
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Known as ‘The Grandparent of Skyscrapers’, Shrewsbury Flaxmill Maltings is an internationally important historical site. It is the multi-storied iron-framed building in the world, first used as a Mill and then a Maltings, it was operational until the 1980s.