Burton Mail

£5k grant helps the show go on

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THE Ashby Venture Theatre has received a £5,000 grant from the Theatres Trust to help it safely reopen once lockdown is over.

The money will be used to install a specialise­d air exchange unit, which replaces old air with freshly treated air and will help protect the building from Covid and other unwelcome viruses.

Terry Hammond, a spokesman for the theatre, said: “We are absolutely thrilled with the grant from the Theatres Trust. It will help make our theatre a safer building for our patrons and hopefully speed up the opening of the theatre once lockdown restrictio­ns are relaxed.

“It has been over a year since we put a production on, although we have produced over 70 mini online production­s which has kept our members active during lockdown.”

The Ashby Theatre, which is owned by the Ashby Dramatic Society, will be celebratin­g its centenary in September.

Terry said: “We are planning a full year of celebratio­ns during 2021/22, and the new equipment will help towards the celebratio­ns going ahead.

“Even if lockdown continues, we will continue to be active and provide entertainm­ent to the public through our online production­s – the show must go on!”

WE’D all like a touch of good luck, now more than ever to ward off ills, but this is nothing new.

One of several fascinatin­g lots in Hansons’ Feb 25-26 Historica, Coins and Banknotes auction is a rare Charles II gold touch-piece coin, estimate £600-£800. Charles II (1630-1685) was king of England, Ireland, and Scotland from 1649 to 1685.

A touch piece is a coin or medal believed to cure disease or bring good luck. What most touch pieces have in common is that they have to be touched or in close physical contact for the ‘power’ to be obtained or transferre­d. Once this is achieved, the power is assumed to be present in the coin.

Since the Middle Ages it had been believed that a touch from royalty could heal the ‘king’s evil’ or scrofula

– a swelling of the lymph nodes in the neck caused by tuberculos­is. This became formalised in ‘touching ceremonies’ which allowed the monarch’s divine powers to be witnessed by the masses. Demand for the royal touch was so high bronze or copper admission tokens were introduced to keep a record of numbers. At the ceremony, the sufferer was presented with a gold touchpiece, which would commonly be hung on a ribbon and worn as a necklace, hence the hole in the coin.

At one time, medallions showing the ‘Devil defeated’ were minted in Britain and distribute­d to the poor in the belief they would reduce disease and sickness. The tradition of touch pieces goes back to Ancient Rome when the Emperor Vespasian (69–79 AD) gave coins to the sick at a ceremony known as ‘the touching’.

Entries are invited for all future coins and banknotes auctions. For a free valuation, email William Hayward: whayward@hansonsauc­tioneers.co.uk.

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 ??  ?? Charles II gold touch-piece coin, estimate £600-£800
Charles II gold touch-piece coin, estimate £600-£800

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