All lectures start at 19:00. There is no need to book – just turn up on the evening. Please email enquiries@plymarchsoc.org.uk with any queries.
For over ten years there has been a large programme of archaeological work on the site of the Sherford new town. An enormous range of archaeological remains have been revealed reaching deep into prehistory, including internationally important Ice Age animal remains and a previously unsuspected Roman road. This talk will provide an overview of what has been found to date and to the current ongoing archaeological works. Rob Bourn is Managing Director of Prion Heritage and has been archaeological consultant for the developers of the new town since 2018, working with many other groups and bodies to implement the archaeological programme ahead of the construction work.
This talk will explore the history of the warship Coronation from construction to its’ demise off Rame Head (in September 1691), the finding and exploration of the wreck site, and current plans for the display of the finds recovered.
Exeter’s historic buildings were decimated not by fire, as with other urban areas, but through the work of the Improvement Commission, and the Dean and Chapter of Exeter Cathedral. The rich printed, archival and visual resources allow the modern reader to understand a process which ultimately prompted Exeter’s middle class to pursue preservation and conservation.
The historical records of the Church of the East (Nestorian Church) refer to the existence of a Bishop in the islands of Bahrain, but no archaeological trace of a Christian presence was found until 2019 when the remains of a large building were uncovered. Subsequent excavations have revealed a significant complex, arguably the Bishop’s palace, occupied from the mid-4th to mid-8th centuries. This talk will present the results of the excavations, consider the trade and life of the people, and discuss the evidence that identifies the occupants as Christian, and how this differs from subsequent archaeological indicators of Islam.