20
Mar
12

Good news, bad news

I’ll start with the good news.

An exciting glimpse of the past has come to light in the market town of Malton, only a few miles down the road from me. Contractors building an extension to a primary school found an Ancient Roman pottery kiln, complete with lots of bits of broken pot. They excavated it and moved it so it can be reconstructed somewhere else, as it couldn’t remain in situ; the school needs its new kitchen and dining-hall.

Before the move, the school’s children had the chance to look at the excavations and talk to the archaeologists. Good – if you want to interest people in history, catch ‘em young!

Mind you, people are already quite used to digging up history in Malton, which was a busy centre for the Romans. There was a fort there, mostly garrisoned by cavalry, and a civilian settlement grew up round it. Those are facts, but another (rather frustrating) fact is that we don’t know for sure what the place was called in Roman times, because the ancient records are contradictory. It was probably Derventio (same root as its river, the Derwent,) but it could just be Delvicia. I’ll stick to Malton for now.

The news reports don’t give much detail about the kiln. What was its date? Was it primarily used for making pots, or for manufacturing roof-tiles? You can often tell this from the kiln’s internal structure. And what else did they find nearby – any coins, perhaps? My curiosity was running at full speed as I wondered about all this. I don’t exactly need this information for the work-in-progress…but when did that ever stop me from following an interesting research trail?

What I do need, I thought, is someone who’s knowledgeable on local history. I’ll ring up Malton Museum, in the market place. They have some interesting Roman stuff there, and are bound to know. Perhaps they’ll even put me in contact with the archaeologists who examined the kiln.

And that’s when I ran into the bad news. Malton Museum closed down at the end of last month.

There must have been publicity about this, but I completely missed it, and the closure comes as a nasty shock. From what I can gather, the Museum lease comes up for renewal in April and apparently the landlords have raised the rent to the point where the Trust can’t afford it. So this month all the precious artefacts are being packed away, to go into storage till a new home can be found. Who knows when that will be?

The trustees bravely maintain that the Museum will “go into the Community”. They’ll continue their educational work,  giving talks and presentations in schools, and they’ll display what they can of their collection at events around the Malton area.

Good luck to them, and may they find a new home soon. Museums are important. I hate to see one disappear.

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2 Responses to “Good news, bad news”


  1. 1 Margaret Hairsine
    March 22, 2012 at 10:59 am

    That’s a shame, Jane, after such an exciting find for you in the Malton Area. They are finding lots of Roman sites in Denia, which I believe was called Dianium. Some have to be built over, but they have also preserved some and made a feature of them. One is the boundary wall, not too far away from our Castle, which shows just how much Denia has grown over the centuries.

    Cartegena, not too far away from Mar Menor where I believe you had your timeshare, is a fantastic living history museum. A delapidated, sordid, navel port around 20 years ago, this Port is now a smart, very interesting, tourist attraction with a Roman Ampitheatre, and many more wonderfully preserved Museums, Walkways, Roman rooms with old tiled floors underneath modern apartment buildings, etc. I went a few years ago and we had a guide. It has excavated much more now and I hope to go again, perhaps with the U3A. Or, they even have Cruise ships visiting there now. They have a huge Fiesta in September with re-enacted battles between the Carteginians and the Romans – a little different from our own Moors and Christians Fiestas.

    Many thanks for all your information for Christine, and I am sorting through it and will print some off to send to her.
    I will let you know what she decides.

  2. March 22, 2012 at 1:28 pm

    Margaret, what fascinating museums and festivals. There’s so much amazing Roman stuff left in Spain (and elsewhere around the Med.) That’s something else I envy you aout living in Denia…along with the climate, the sea, the food and wine! Mind you, just now we’ve got a perfect English spring; colour coming back into the gardens, trees budding, and the daffs peerfect. Hope it lasts.


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