Dorchester Dorset.com Blog

Archive for February, 2010

Terracotta Warriors Museum

Friday, February 26th, 2010
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Unarmoured Terracotta Warrior

Unarmoured Terracotta Warrior

Dorchester the historic county town of Dorset, has a marvellous collection of specialist museums to delight and educate visitors, including the Dinosaur Museum, Mummies Museum, Dorset County Museum and Teddy Bear Museum.

To add to this list is a particular favourite of mine, the Terracotta Warriors Museum situated in the centre of Dorchester, at the lower end of High East Street. This small but inspiring exhibition focuses on the Terracotta Warriors of the First Emperor of China and explores the remarkable discovery of these amazing treasures of ancient China – now regarded as the 8th Wonder of the Ancient World.

Discovering the Terracotta Warriors

The discovery of the Terracotta Warriors in 1974 by local farmers digging a well, has gripped the imagination of people around the world.

The Terracotta Warriors were created by the first Emperor of China, Qin Shi Huangdi who conquered and united China to become its First Emperor. He built the Great Wall of China and amassed great works of art. The Emperor was obsessed with immortality, and 70,000 workers built his tomb and installed 8000 fantastic life-size clay warriors to protect it. The warriors stand up to 2 metres tall and weigh up to 300 kilograms.

If you have been fortunate to make the journey to the site at Xian in Shaanxi Province you will never forget the experience. Closer to home, adults and children of all ages can enjoy the Terracotta Warriors Museum in Dorchester, Dorset, one of the few museums outside China exclusively dedicated to the amazing Terracotta Warriors.

The Terracotta Warrior Displays

The Terracotta Warriors Museum displays are in 9 sections and tell the story of the discovery and excavation of the tomb. Displays include exact replicas of the life-size Terracotta Warriors and their armour. Dramatic audio and multi-media presentations will entertain and educate, and bring the whole experience stunningly to life. You can also experience a journey through Chinese history illustrated with antiquities covering two millennia. Children can meet General Meng Tian and Qin Shi Huangdi with their fabulous costumes and the Royal Guard uniformed officers.

All the Terracotta Warriors displayed in the museum have been specially made for the exhibition by the technicians of the Lintong Museum Cultural Relic Workshop, Xian, China, as well as workshops of the China National Arts & Crafts Corporation, Xian. The figures with their astounding detail are in all respects identical to the original terracotta warriors having been made near the Emperor’s tomb in the same clay and fired in the same way as the originals. The hands and the heads of the Terracotta Warriors were made separately, and each head is reputed to be different and individual.

Own your very own Terracotta Warrior

Own your very own Terracotta Warrior from the Museum Shop

The Terracotta Warriors featured in the display comprise various types, including crossbowmen, kneeling bowmen, a charioteer, an officer and a general. The entire exhibit is extremely impressive and is accompanied by audio programmes which help bring the discovery to life.

The Terracotta Warriors Museum is open all year round, Monday to Sunday, April to October 10.00am to 5.00pm and in November to March 10.00am to 4:30pm.

Admission is £5.75 per adult, Children £4.00 (under 5 years free), Seniors/Students £5.00 and a family ticket (2 adults and 2 children) is £18.00.

On the Terracotta Warriors Museum website you can print a voucher entitling you to a 50p discount on entry tickets.

The specialist shop within the Terracotta Museum, offers authentic Terracotta army figurines recreated by Chinese craftsmen, as well as pottery, postcards and general Exhibition gifts. Most items are also available on the Terracotta Museum online shop.

If you are visiting Dorchester for the day don’t forget there are plenty of cafes and places to grab a bite to eat just a few minutes walk away from the Museum.

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Dorchester Teddy Bear Museum

Friday, February 19th, 2010
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Dorchester Teddy Bear Museum

Dorchester Teddy Bear Museum

From a very young age we have been fascinated with Teddy Bear and there cannot be many of us who did not receive one as a child, or have given one as a present. We name them, use them as comforters, and create characters that become great bedtime stories for young children. Iconic Teddy Bear characters include Paddington, the first to appear on TV, Winnie-the-Pooh made by J.K. Farnell and bought for Christopher Robin in 1921, Rupert Bear, and Pudsey Bear the ‘Children in Need’ mascot. You can now re-live an enchanting time from your own childhood, and give a real thrill to today’s children, by visiting the Dorchester Teddy Bear Museum.

The Teddy Bear Museum is easy to find and is located in Eastgate Centre, on the corner of High East Street and Salisbury Street, Dorchester, a short walk from the Dinosaur Museum. The Museum is set in the ‘house’ of Edward Bear a human sized teddy bear who, along with his family, is an avid bear collector.  The unique teddy bear Edwardian style house with life-sized bears is a must for both family and collector alike. The wonderful and varied display offers sheer enjoyment for the young, and a fascinating and nostalgic look at this much loved toy, for the not so young. It houses a large display of teddy bears from throughout the last century starting from the earliest examples right up to today’s TV favourites. The Dorset Teddy Bear Museum’s oldest bear is Michael dating from 1906 who is based on the original teddy bear design and pattern.

History of the Teddy Bear

Edward Bear waiting to meet you

Edward Bear waiting to meet you

The history of the teddy bear, you may be surprised to learn, dates back to only 1902, with 2002 marking the 100th birthday of the teddy bear.  It was invented almost simultaneously in the United States and Germany but it was the US that gave it its name.

It all began with President Theodore Roosevelt on a hunting trip in Mississippi, he refused to shoot a bear captured and tethered by his hunting party. The incident was immortalized in the Washington Post with a ‘Spare The Bear’ cartoon by Clifford Berryman. This cartoon is believed to have triggered the teddy bear craze in the U.S.

In Brooklyn, New York, shopkeepers Morris & Rose Michtom on seeing the cartoon made a plush toy bear which was placed in the window of their stationary shop calling it “Teddy’s Bear”. The Michtom’s formed the Ideal Novelty and Toy Corporation and became the first company to produce teddy bears.

At about the same time in Germany, Richard Steiff, the nephew of Margarete Steiff, designed a teddy bear based on the bears he had seen at the local zoo. The Steiff Company of Giengen produced its first jointed stuffed bears and the Steiff teddy bears were put on show at the 1903 Leipzig Fair – an American buyer saw them and ordered 3,000 for shipment to the US. Between 1903 and the First World War the Steiff Company sold literally millions of bears, with their trademark button in the left ear, to the United States, Germany and Britain, as the teddy bear became the latest toy craze.

Bear Collection

Bear Collection

The Dorset Teddy Bear Museum houses examples from the earliest antique teddy bears right up to today’s TV favourites and they are all waiting to greet you in this enchanting Teddy Bear Museum. School children will enjoy the experience – my son visited for the second time at the beginning of February and loved exploring the rooms and managed to find Edward Bear, Sleepy Granddad and mummy bear picking flowers. He still cherishes ‘Milo the Milkman’ teddy bear bought in the gift shop on his first outing to the museum.

Visiting the Teddy Bear Museum

The Teddy Bear Museum is open all year round, Monday to Sunday, April to October 10.00am to 5.00pm and in November to March 10.00am to 4:30pm. Closed 25th and 26th December. Admission is £5.75 per adult, Children £4.00 (under 4 years free), Seniors/Students £5.00 and a family ticket (2 adults and 2 children) is £18.00. Please contact the museum for special rates for groups and schools.

On the Teddy Bear Museum website you can print a voucher entitling you to a 50p discount on entry tickets and also sign up for their regular newsletter giving details on special events.

The museum’s charming period teddy bear shop is probably the best in the south! The museum’s shop stocks top brands: Steiff Teddy Bear, Merrythought, Dean’s, Gund and many more, to tempt you and is ideal for Teddy bear collectors and all those who love teddy bears. You can also purchase these teddy bears via the museums’ online shop.

The Teddy Bear Museum is a great place for both young and old and should be on your list of things to do when you visit Dorchester.

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Mummies Museum Dorchester

Friday, February 12th, 2010
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Mummy Mask

Mummy Mask

Dorchester has become an outpost of Ancient Egypt since the opening of The Tutankhamun Exhibition in 1987, the most comprehensive exhibition on the boy pharaoh outside of Egypt. Dorchester has often been the only place where you can experience the splendour of Tutankhamun’s tomb, for the real tomb in the Valley of the Kings restricts the number of visits. The Tutankhamum Exhibition holds a spectacular recreation of Tutankhamun’s tomb and treasures.

Next to the Tutankhamun Exhibition, is another splendid exhibition titled ‘Mummies of the Pharaohs’ located in the Amarna Centre on Alington Street, Dorchester.

Mummies of the Pharaohs

This mummies exhibition reveals 3000 years of Ancient Egyptian embalming dating right back to the earliest reed burials and sand burials. The exhibition includes exact facsimiles of mummies and thrilling facts about the mummification process, how they were wrapped and the cult of the dead in Ancient Egypt. It is a great opportunity for people of all ages to discover the secrets of the Pharaohs of Ancient Egypt, their treasures and the magic that protected their mummified bodies.

What is a Mummy?

Ask a young child and you will get an obvious answer. Many people think of mummies as humans covered head to toe in bandages and associate them with horror films such as the “Curse of the Mummy” while others regard them as somewhat humorous characters in cartoons such as Scooby Doo.

The Egyptian mummies have certainly gripped people’s imagination and challenged explorers and historians as a source of inspiration and mystery.

A little more prosaic is the dictionary definition which describes a Mummy as “A dead human body embalmed and dried after the manner of the ancient Egyptians. A body preserved in a dry state from the process of putrefaction.” The exhibition provides visitors with a much more detailed account of the mummification process.

The practice of mummifying the dead was not restricted to humans. The Egyptians turned their skills to mummifying animals as well, particularly those whose form was assumed by the gods, such as Bastet (cat) and Sobek (crocodile). These were mummified in huge numbers and buried within the confines of temples dedicated to them.

How did the Egyptians wrap the Mummy?

The Egyptian mummies were wrapped in linen and it has been calculated that a mummy might use up to 375 square metres or 448 square yards of cloth – some burials used cast-off domestic clothing and household towels. Before the wrapping could begin, all the linen had to be collected together and arranged in stacks according to purpose.

One piece would be used as a shroud, another for padding, while yet another would be used to produce lengths and lengths of bandaging.  It took fifteen days to wrap a mummy. This was because every action was dictated by ritual and had to be accompanied by the appropriate recitation of spells.

Ancient secrets of the Mummies revealed

This unique exhibition reveals 3000 years of Ancient Egyptian embalming.

Highlights include:-

Ginger

An example of ancient sand burials, Ginger is thought to be the oldest known predynastic sun-dried mummy. He was buried at Geblein about 3200 BCE. His dead body was perfectly dried and preserved by the action of hot dry sand.

You can also see a superb collection of unwrapped royal mummies featuring:

Ramses the Great

Ramses the Great ruled Egypt during the time of the Biblical Exodus. Ramses the Great, also know in some sources as Ramesses or Rameses, was an Egyptian pharaoh during the 19th dynasty. He reigned for more than 66 years and during his rule Ramses concentrated on building cities and temples and exploring regions outside Egypt.

Seti Mummy

Seti Mummy

Seti I

Seti I, a Pharaoh of Ancient Egypt, was a great warrior king. He was the father of Ramses the Great.

Also mummified sacred animals, death-masks, coffins and other treasures are on display. All have been specially recreated for this fascinating exhibition.

Egyptian Mummy Pictures

Take a look at the Mummies Exhibition website to view a small selection of the mummies and artefacts displayed in the Exhibition.

The Mummy Exhibition is open all year round, Monday to Sunday between 10.00am and 5.00pm. Admission is £4.50 per adult, Children £3.00 (under 5 years free), Seniors/Students £4.50 and a family ticket (2 adults and 2 children) is £13.00. If you combine your visit with a trip to the Tutankhamun Exhibition,  you can take advantage of a deal offering half price entry to the Mummies Exhibition.

There is an online shop selling everything from essential books about mummies, statues, replica coffins, and mummy related jewellery including Shabtis which were widely used as funerary figurines.

Why not try a visit to the Mummies Museum this half term and be part of the ancient Mummy Experience.

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The Dinosaur Museum

Friday, February 5th, 2010
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Dinosaur Skeleton at The Dinoasur Museum

Dinosaur Skeleton at The Dinosaur Museum

Although dinosaurs became extinct nearly 65 million years ago, they are very much alive in the hearts and minds of today’s children and adults all over the world. For dinosaur lovers, Dorset offers 2 great attractions, The Dinosaur Museum in Dorchester and fossil hunting on the Jurassic Coastline. The coastline of Dorset is a fossil hunting haven for both novice and experienced fossil collectors. The 150km (95 mile) stretch of coastline covering Dorset and East Devon spans 185 million years of geological history and has been granted World Heritage Status.

The Dinosaur Museum is located on Icen Way in the centre of Dorchester. The museum, which celebrated its 25th birthday on Saturday 27th June 2009, was an instant success when it opened being the only museum on mainland Britain dedicated to dinosaurs. It has won many accolades including twice being voted one of Britain’s Top Ten Hands-on Museums, as well as Dorset’s Family Attraction of the Year. Most recently it was chosen as one of Britain’s Ten Best Child-Friendly Museums.

Our fascination with Dinosaurs

The museum is a real treat for children and it combines life-sized reconstructions of dinosaurs with fossils and skeletons to create an exciting hands-on experience. Our fascination with dinosaurs started in the 1820s when the first true discoveries of dinosaur bones were made in England. Then in 1841 Sir Richard Owen invented the word “dinosauria” – meaning terrible lizard’ – to describe this group of prehistoric monsters. More recently the Steven Spielberg films “Jurassic Park” and the BBC’s magnificent science programmes ‘Walking with Dinosaurs’ has excited people’s imagination.

This interest in the history of dinosaurs and sense of “dinomania” is reflected in The Dinosaur Museum. Multimedia displays tell the story of the prehistoric animals that ruled the land for some 150 million years, finally becoming extinct 65 million years ago. Life-size dinosaur reconstructions – including Tyrannosaurus rex, Stegosaurus, and Triceratops – beg to be touched by little hands – that’s encouraged.

Children Love Dinosaurs

Children from a very early age seem fascinated by these prehistoric beasts. They quickly learn their names, and all the dinosaur facts associated with them. Dinosaurs help to extend a child’s imagination and channel that interest to study science and this is recognised in the National Curriculum. It is no surprise then, that the Museum is extremely popular with schools linking various topics to the study of dinosaurs, and the Dinosaur Museum has an enviable reputation for its educational services. The Dinosaur Museum is a family museum and has frequently appeared on television, usually in children’s programmes such as Blue Peter, the Tweenies and many others.

The Triceratops dominates the Museum’s courtyard and on entering the museum children will encounter a complete dinosaur skeleton of the famous meat-eating Megalosaurus, a Jurassic dinosaur, with its sickle-shaped claws and teeth, mounted over a set of very rare footprints made by that dinosaur.

Megalosaurus was the first dinosaur to be scientifically named 175 years ago, by Reverend William Buckland. This skeleton vividly contrasts with the skeleton of the small fleet-footed vegetarian dinosaur Hypsilophodon. My son visited the museum with his school this week and enjoyed creating his own dinosaur on the computer. There are hands on displays, dinosaur skeletons and dinosaur reconstructions to keep the children entertained.

In the Buckland Room there is a life size reconstruction of a Corythosaurus known affectionately as Dina to all in the museum. She was originally made by the special effects team of the BBC hit sci-fi series Dr Who. Called “Invasion of the Dinosaurs” the programmes starred Jon Pertwee as the Doctor and Elizabeth Sladen as his assistant – Sarah Jane Smith.

Among the most dramatic displays are the awe inspiring life-size dinosaur reconstructions. There are two life-size dinosaur reconstructions, of T rex, one of the largest meat eating land animal ever and of a Stegosaurus with its strangely shaped ridge of plates along its back. Children are encouraged to touch the displays with hands including some of the dinosaur fossils.

After visiting the museum you can view the dinosaur news blog which offers an up to date source on palaeonthology and prehistoric creatures and news on fossil finds during the year.  Or, view the recent Pliosaur film reporting on the 25 large pieces of a fossil collected by Mr Sheehan along the Dorset coast.

The Dinosaur Museum Facilities

Look inside The Dinosaur Museum at Virtual Dorchester

Look inside The Dinosaur Museum at Virtual Dorchester

The ground floor of the Museum is accessible for people using a wheelchair (only one step with temporary ramp at the entrance). The two upstairs galleries are inaccessible to wheelchair users and to compensate a concessionary rate is charged. Car parking and a wide range of cafes and restaurants in Dorchester can be found within easy walking distance of the Museum.

The Dinosaur Museum is open all year round and during the holiday period April to October it is open Monday to Sunday between 9.30am and 5.30pm.

Between November and March it is open reduced hours 10.00am to 4.30pm. Admission is £6.75 per adult, Children over 4 £4.95, Seniors/Students £5.75 and a family ticket (2 adults and 2 children) is £21.00.

Please contact the Museum for special rates for groups and schools.

There is an online shop selling everything from fossils, dinosaur DVDs, toys, dinosaur t-shirts, stationery and museum souvenirs.

Why not try a visit the Virtual Dorchester pages to view the new 360 degrees virtual tour of the Museum to get an overview of this fantastic family attraction and be part of the Jurassic Experience.

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Dorchester RingGo Parking Update

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010
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The Dorchester RingGo Parking system kicked off to a great start before Christmas and with new users registering every week its use is rising.

Dorset County Council have announced that RingGo is also to be made available on the street meters as well from Monday of this week.

This is excellent news as they have agreed to the Dorchester BID’s request to allow remote ‘top up’ for the street meters (like in the car parks) and they have also agreed to make the 10p text alert free. There is still a 20p convenience charge but for an hour or mores parking this is good insurance against a £25 or £50 fine.

This means that there is now even a bigger incentive for you to register with RingGo - RingGo users will have the added flexibility of getting the 10 minute warning text, and you will be able to top up their parking remotely by phone even when using the street meters.

No More: fumbling for coins, using shops as change machines, mad dashes to get back to your car before an over-keen attendant writes you a ticket.

Much more: relaxed visits to town, time to explore all of Dorchester

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