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8 Hidden Treasures from the English Heritage stores
Our historians and curators have chosen 8 of their favourite items from the English Heritage collection. Discover why these items are so interesting and find out where you can see them.
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How to run a Victorian organic kitchen garden
Kitchen Garden Supervisor Gemma Sturges explains how Victorian gardeners produced food for the family and staff at Audley End.
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Food and Feasting at Stonehenge
Find out what the people who built and used Stonehenge ate, how they cooked and served their food, and the cutting-edge science behind these discoveries.
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View images that explore the story of the Stonehenge landscape, its communities and how they were changed by the First World War.
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ROBERTS, Fredrick Sleigh, Earl Roberts (1832–1914)
Blue Plaque commemorating Field Marshal Earl Frederick Sleigh Roberts at 47 Portland Place, Marylebone, London W1B 1JH, City of Westminster.
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Tim Etchells: Wait Here (Double Line)
For Berwick Barracks’ the temporary installation Wait Here (Double Line) comprises a new version of Etchells’ 2008 neon work, the full text for which reads ‘Wait Here I Have Gone to Get Help’. Visible above the gatehouse entrance of the town’s former military barracks, Etchells’ work makes a playful intervention into the site invoking an imaginary situation of peril and a fictitious mission to gather support. Long a home for troops on call for missions further North or abroad – the Barracks is recast by Etchells as the location for another kind of story about danger and the need for caution or defence.
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Discover the reality of life for the men, women and children in service at a Victorian country house in the 1880s.
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History of Burgh Castle Roman Fort
A brief history and description of Burgh Castle Roman Fort, part of a string of forts along what is known today as the Saxon Shore, extending between the Solent and the Wash.
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A brief history of Caister Roman Fort, one of a chain of coastal forts along the south and east coasts of England.
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The Stonehenge World Heritage Site is famous throughout the world and is one of the most important prehistoric landscapes in Europe. Today this landscape is split in two by a major road - the A303 - which acts as a barrier to people enjoying, exploring and understanding the World Heritage Site.