Teaching classics with objects? The acquisition of classical antiquities by British schools, 1860–1950

British secondary schools amassed collections of antiquities from the mid-nineteenth century onwards. These ordinarily contained classical objects, sometimes alongside Egyptian antiquities, and accompanied collections of natural history, geology and ethnography. This paper uses the collection formed...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Croker, O
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2021
_version_ 1797108690403196928
author Croker, O
author_facet Croker, O
author_sort Croker, O
collection OXFORD
description British secondary schools amassed collections of antiquities from the mid-nineteenth century onwards. These ordinarily contained classical objects, sometimes alongside Egyptian antiquities, and accompanied collections of natural history, geology and ethnography. This paper uses the collection formed by Bedford Modern School, now housed at the Higgins Museum, Bedford, to study the phenomenon of school classical collections. The analysis presented here places school collections within a wider history of ‘object lessons’, but suggests that these collections were more than merely teaching aids. School museums could act as signifiers of power and prestige, connection to alumni and wider local communities, and to a heritage of learning and scholarship embodied by classical antiquities. Furthermore, these collections illustrate the personalities and interests of individual collectors – usually the schoolmasters who were instrumental in their formation.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:30:38Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:9b53a647-f62e-481c-b3a1-b643c00223f8
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:30:38Z
publishDate 2021
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:9b53a647-f62e-481c-b3a1-b643c00223f82023-01-19T08:47:20ZTeaching classics with objects? The acquisition of classical antiquities by British schools, 1860–1950Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:9b53a647-f62e-481c-b3a1-b643c00223f8EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Press2021Croker, OBritish secondary schools amassed collections of antiquities from the mid-nineteenth century onwards. These ordinarily contained classical objects, sometimes alongside Egyptian antiquities, and accompanied collections of natural history, geology and ethnography. This paper uses the collection formed by Bedford Modern School, now housed at the Higgins Museum, Bedford, to study the phenomenon of school classical collections. The analysis presented here places school collections within a wider history of ‘object lessons’, but suggests that these collections were more than merely teaching aids. School museums could act as signifiers of power and prestige, connection to alumni and wider local communities, and to a heritage of learning and scholarship embodied by classical antiquities. Furthermore, these collections illustrate the personalities and interests of individual collectors – usually the schoolmasters who were instrumental in their formation.
spellingShingle Croker, O
Teaching classics with objects? The acquisition of classical antiquities by British schools, 1860–1950
title Teaching classics with objects? The acquisition of classical antiquities by British schools, 1860–1950
title_full Teaching classics with objects? The acquisition of classical antiquities by British schools, 1860–1950
title_fullStr Teaching classics with objects? The acquisition of classical antiquities by British schools, 1860–1950
title_full_unstemmed Teaching classics with objects? The acquisition of classical antiquities by British schools, 1860–1950
title_short Teaching classics with objects? The acquisition of classical antiquities by British schools, 1860–1950
title_sort teaching classics with objects the acquisition of classical antiquities by british schools 1860 1950
work_keys_str_mv AT crokero teachingclassicswithobjectstheacquisitionofclassicalantiquitiesbybritishschools18601950