New galleries at the British Museum
Open 13 June 2007
Rooms 49 – 52
Admission free
In June 2007 the British Museum will open three newly
refurbished galleries devoted to Ancient Iran, Prehistoric Europe
and the Middle East. Vital plant works and refurbishment have also
taken place in the galleries of Iron Age and Roman Britain. The
galleries are situated on the upper floor of the Museum and are the
first to reopen as part of an ongoing plan of gallery
improvement.
Room 52: The Rahim Irvani Gallery of Ancient Iran
This gallery features objects from the Museum’s unparalleled
collection of material from Ancient Iran. Cases examine the birth
of the first cities, the age of migration, the development of the
Persian Empire, the Iranian revival under the Parthians and the
Sasanian empire which followed. The iconic Cyrus Cylinder and
the extraordinary Oxus Treasure form the centrepiece to the
gallery, testimony to Iran’s importance in the ancient world. Early
casts of relief’s from Persepolis, the capital of the Persian
Empire, are mounted on the gallery walls to suggest the monumental
splendour and power of the Persian state. These relief’s also bear
witness to the extent and size of the empire, featuring subject
peoples from as far afield as India and Greece bearing tribute for
the Persian king. Audio visual screens give visitors an opportunity
to examine the site of Persepolis in depth offering a
reconstruction of the site at its zenith and of its destruction by
the troops of Alexander in 330BC. The new gallery has been
generously supported by Maryam and Vahid Alaghband
Room 51: The Birth of Agriculture; Europe and the Middle East
10,000-800 BC
In this space the ancient Middle East meets ancient Europe. Both
stories begin here, with the birth of agriculture 12,000 years ago
in the Middle East, when in Europe people were still living off the
wild resources the land provided. The switch to food production was
to change their way of life for ever. People settled down in
villages and towns developed and trading networks were consolidated
and expanded. This new way of life spread gradually across the
Middle East and Europe, arriving in Britain about 6,000 years ago.
The gallery displays artefacts which are the only evidence we have
of how people lived in this period. These are nonetheless full of
clues to the ways in which they positioned themselves in society,
in the natural world and in the cosmos. The gallery will feature
the oldest known grinding stone in the world, which is 12,000 years
old and comes from Abu Hureyra in Syria. Such stones were used to
produce flour from grains and pulses such wheat and lentils. The
figures moving in a ritual dance on the sophisticated bowl from
Tall-i-Bakun, southern Iran contrasts with the mysterious
spirituality of the shaman’s headdress from Star Carr in Yorkshire
made during the same period.
Room 51: Prehistoric Europe
Once farming was established in Europe, it took some 3000 years
to reach Britain at around 4000BC. Agricultural communities left a
heavier footprint on the land both in terms of the monuments they
built and the material goods they lost, concealed or discarded. The
gallery features some of the most important prehistoric objects in
the Museum’s collections. Through them we may track the ways in
which these goods were deployed to define identity, wealth, power
and status in an increasingly competitive world. Such concepts were
evidently as important in death as in life, in matters mundane and
sacred. This is borne out by objects as diverse as the unique Mold
gold cape, the stunning Ringlemere cup and the enigmatic Oxborough
dirk. Everywhere in Europe regional identity was strongly
expressed, whether through striking personal ornaments, distinctive
battle gear or the potter’s art. Ornate equipment like the
Dunaverney bronze flesh hook bears witness to the social and
political importance of feasting. Vigorous, diverse and enduring
cultures had developed in Britain and Europe well in advance of the
Roman Empire, exploding the myth that the Romans were the first to
‘civilise’ the region. The objects on display in the gallery also
show how new ideas were taken up, adopted and adapted by different
prehistoric communities. Britain’s iconic monument, Stonehenge,
looks over the gallery in two guises: bleakly, in Winter, on the
west wall and at Midsummer sunrise on the east, reminding us of the
sun’s journey through the cosmos, the human journey through life
into death and the supremacy of the annual cycle which is the
farming year.
Room 49 The Weston Gallery of Roman Britain
Thanks to the generosity of the Garfield Weston Foundation the
Museum has been able to undertake vital improvements to the
infrastructure of one of its most popular galleries. Containing
thousands of objects dating between AD43 and AD 411, it includes
examples of masterpieces of Romano British silverware and the
famous Vindolanda tablets. Some of the key treasures from the
museum's British collections including the Mildenhall Treasure, the
Hoxne Hoard and the Walter Newton Treasure have been conserved and
re-displayed to include more contextual information. Part of
the Hinton St Mary mosaic, possibly the earliest depiction of
Christ will form the centrepiece to the gallery. New finds such as
the extraordinary Ashwell Hoard (purchased with the help of the Art
Fund) will go on display for the first time after extensive
conservation work.
For further information or images please contact Hannah Boulton
on 020 7323 8522 or hboulton@thebritishmuseum.ac.uk
Notes to Editors:
The gallery improvement programme began with the Japanese
Galleries and Prints and Drawings which reopened in 2006. The
programme will continue with the galleries dedicated to Medieval
Europe and Clocks and Watches.
British Museum Press have published many books on the subject of
Prehistory and Ancient Iran. For more details please visit www.britishmuseum.co.uk