As a student of history, I must confess to an overwhelming interest in archaeology. The British TV show 'Time Team' (available on YouTube) is among my favourite viewing, and I follow archeological websites, Twitterfeeds and Tumblr pages with something approaching fascination.
People of the Regency era were no less interested in antiquities. The term 'archaeologist' was not often used. The people interested in relics of the past were called 'antiquarians'. During the Regency era, as now, one could seldom stick a shovel in the ground in the British isles without turning up something interesting.
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Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette - Wednesday 07 January 1807 |
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Chester Courant - Tuesday 06 August 1811 |
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Morning Post - Tuesday 04 January 1814 |
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Sussex Advertiser - Monday 09 March 1812 |
The Society of Antiquaries, later I believe known as The Antiquarian Society, as conceived as early as 1707. Open to gentlemen with an interest in antiquities, the society was eventually chartered and began to collect objects in its own right.
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The Antiquarian Society by George Cruickshank 1812 © The Trustees of the British Museum |
The great interest in antiquities led to the publication of numerous books and periodicals. The work in the advertisement below indicates it will be published monthly, and contain eight etchings in each issue.
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Hull Advertiser and Exchange Gazette - Saturday 24 February 1810 |
The antiquarians were delighted and intrigued by every fresh discovery, and the newspapers covered the finds extensively.
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Cumberland Pacquet, and Ware's Whitehaven Advertiser - Tuesday 29 October 1816 |
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Globe - Monday 03 August 1818 |
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Globe - Monday 21 October 1811 |
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Morning Post - Wednesday 27 October 1819 |
I do wish that all these finds could have benefited from modern recording and scholarship, but the delight the finders experienced was no doubt equal to the thrill experienced by the archaeologists of 'Time Team'. I am excited to read about any discoveries in any era. Though excavation is destructive, artifacts from the past bring ancient peoples to life and enhance our understanding of them.
'Til next time,
Lesley-Anne
Sources: http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/
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