The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Crieff campus to host artefacts as part of archaeolog­y trail GENEROSITY:

Anonymous donation will allow the replica items to be displayed

- JAMIE BUCHAN Above: A pendant and Bronze Age food vessel. jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

A series of intriguing artefacts will go on permanent show in Crieff, following the launch of the town’s new archaeolog­y trail.

The three items are museum-quality replicas and examples of historic pieces unearthed during excavation work.

They will be displayed at Strathearn Community Campus, thanks to a “tremendous­ly generous” windfall from an anonymous donor.

Among the collection is a reproducti­on of a Bronze Age food vessel which was found in the grounds of the campus, on the site of an old parliament­ary mound – or stayt – which dates back to the 14th Century.

The original is held at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, while the replica is being crafted by specialist potter Graham Taylor whose clients include the Stonehenge Visitor Centre.

A replica of an early Bronze Age pendant, found during constructi­on of new Crieff Primary School in 2014, is also being produced.

The piece of jewellery is regarded as a particular­ly fine example of the type that is predominan­tly confined to northern Britain.

The third exhibit will be a collection of original flint-knapped arrowheads.

These were also unearthed during work on the primary school, but the pieces that will be exhibited were sourced from the Sahara, North Africa, due to the scarcity and expense of UK specimens.

The seven Broich Road arrowheads were found in a burial plot and are believed to have been used for hunting birds, animals and fish.

Ian Hamilton, chairman of the Strathearn Archaeolog­ical and Historical Society, said: “We are indebted to the donor’s tremendous generosity and vision at the potential of further developing the presentati­on of Crieff’s archaeolog­ical past and riches at the campus, to the benefit of generation­s of school pupils, residents and visitors.”

He said: “What many people do not realise is that significan­t, original archaeolog­ical finds are very, very rarely loaned out to local communitie­s because of security, environmen­tal, insurance, presentati­on, staffing and access considerat­ions.

“This donation overcomes such obstacles at a stroke.”

Mr Hamilton said a further find – a razor – could also be replicated.

The full amount of the donation, which has not been made public, will also help fund a new leaflet to promote the archaeolog­y trail which was formally launched last month.

 ??  ?? The arrowheads will form part of the display at Strathearn Community Campus.
The arrowheads will form part of the display at Strathearn Community Campus.
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