The Herald

Nine pound bronze cannon stolen from Royal Armouries

-

A 19TH-CENTURY cannon from the Royal Armouries collection has been stolen, it has been disclosed.

Police were called after a ninepound bronze gun, which is 64.5 inches (1.64 metres) in length and dated to 1859, was taken from a remote location in February, the institutio­n said.

Such artillery pieces are named for the weight of the cannonball they fired, and the stolen object would be considerab­ly heavier.

The theft, which did not take place at any of the body’s museum venues, was revealed yesterday.

It is believed that the incident was a metal theft, meaning the cannon was thought to have been taken for its scrap value, rather than stolen as a “collection object” according to Royal Armouries.

The body, which houses the national collection of arms and armours at the Tower of London, the Royal Armouries Museum in Leeds and Fort Nelson near Portsmouth, also disclosed that other items are missing.

Royal Armouries said that a pair of mounted sword bayonets, worth £500, disappeare­d while on loan and police officers were called. As a result of an investigat­ion, other parts of the body’s collection were recalled, the institutio­n said.

The cannon, described as a “smoothbore cannon barrel made of bronze”, was “removed by thieves from a remote location, offsite from any of the Royal Armouries’ venues”, according to the institutio­n.

It added: “No monetary valuation was specified for this object. This incident was considered metal theft rather than the object being stolen for its value as a collection object.

“The Royal Armouries staff acted swiftly to escalate the incident to the Executive Board and Board of Trustees in line with our policies.

“The police were notified and involved, and the Royal Armouries took immediate action to investigat­e the incident taking remedial action, as necessary.”

The bayonets, dated to 1837, were discovered missing by the Royal Armouries in May last year as part of a routine audit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom