London — Wallace Collection
& Petrie Museum
The Wallace Collection is
a museum in Manchester Square, London. It is located inside the beautiful
Hertford House, home of the Marquesses of Hertford, but named after Sir
Richard Wallace, who curated the collection in the 18th and 19th
centuries. The collection features art ranging from the 15th to
19th centuries, including furniture, arms and armor, paintings,
and decorative arts. Visitors to the area will appreciate that it is a free
museum.
Among the Collection's treasures are an
outstanding array of 18th-century French art, many important 17th and
19th-century paintings, medieval and Renaissance works of art, and one of the
finest collections of princely arms and armor in all of Britain!
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Petrie
Museum
Tucked away on the campus of University College London is one of
the most amazing hidden collections of Egyptology and Egyptian Archaeology —
the Petrie Museum. If your teen is into Egyptian mythology, hieroglyphs, or
even Rick Riordan's Kane Chronicles, they're going to love this curated set of
antiquities.
The initial collection was donated by the an author, who sponsored
college professors on excavations. The first Edwards Professor, William Flinders Petrie, conducted many such
excavations, and in 1913 he sold his collections of Egyptian antiquities to
University College, creating the Flinders Petrie Collection of Egyptian
Antiquities. This transformed the small museum into one of the leading
collections outside Egypt, and it maintains that status today.
Medieval Art
Medieval art was produced in many media, including sculpture,
stained glass, mosaics, metalwork, and illuminated manuscripts, all of which
survive in many forms today. Frescoes and tapestries were also prevalent, but
there aren't as many surviving pieces. While a common misconception is that
most medieval art was religious, this is far from true. The church did spend
quite a bit on art, but there was also much secular art, though it did not fare
as well due to not being preserved in the same methods as the larger church
collections.
It was expensive to make many of these pieces. As an example, when
the Jarrow Abbey began to make three (3) copies of the Bible, they had to begin
with breeding 1600 calves so they would have the skins needed for the required
vellum! Paper did not become available until the end of the medieval age, and
it was still incredibly expensive.
Churches were adorned in frescoes with scenes from the life of
Christ, Old Testament scenes, and those of the Last Judgement. Secular works
often featured knightly heroism or courtly love. The vast majority of narrative
medieval art, however, depicted religious events. Even today, the elements of
medieval art have still proved an inspiration for many modern artists.
Make Your Own Jumping Jack - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-fDLVVnQvy8
Pick up activities and worksheets to augment your real or virtual trip in the unit study bundle below!
Explore the art, history, geography, food, and culture of England in this
cross-curricular unit study….perfect for families getting ready to travel abroad or folks who want to travel via unit studies! Each stop along the roadschooling trip covers a different facet of history and culture with unit information, resources, worksheets, activities, and more...
Table of Contents:
- o Introduction & Geography of England
- o Portsmouth
- o The Mary Rose & naval archaeology
- o London
- o The British Museum & archaeology
- o The Wallace Collection & medieval history
- o The Tower of London / London Bridge & the Tudors
- o Buckingham Palace & royalty
- o Victoria and Albert Museum & medieval art
- o Thames / Globe Theater & Shakespeare
- o Sherlock Holmes Museum & British Literature
- o Abbey Road & British Invasion
- o Leeds
- o Royal Armouries & middle ages
- o York
- o Jorvik & Vikings
- o York Castle & archaeology
- o Haltwhistle
- o Hadrian’s Wall & ancient Celts
- o Vindolanda & archaeology
- o Alnwick
- o Alnwick Castle & architecture
- o Poison Garden & herbs
- o Barter Books & WW2 history
- o Alnmouth
- o North Sea & train history
- o Newcastle o Segedunum & ancient Romans
- o Tips & Tricks for Travelling in England