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Shaftesbury Abbey Museum & Garden
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Museum
Gold Hill

Shaftesbury, 

Dorset, 

SP7 8JW,  England (map)
+44 01747 852157, e-mailwebsite
Gold Hill Museum and Garden
Nestled at the top of the famous ‘Gold Hill’ with spectacular views over the Blackmore Vale, the museum offers something for everyone. Please note the museum is closed during 2010 for extensive improvements, reopens April 2011.
Price Details
Adult - 2009
(Adult)
Price: £2.50

Child - 2009
(Child)
Price: £1.00

Concession - 2009
(Concession)
Price: £2.00

Family (2+2) - 2009
(Family)
Price: £6.00

Opening
01 Jan 2010 to 31 Dec 2010
Please check for opening times.
01 Apr 2011 to 31 Oct 2011
Monday 10:00-17:00
Tuesday 10:00-17:00
Wednesday 10:00-17:00
Thursday 10:00-17:00
Friday 10:00-17:00
Saturday 10:00-17:00
Sunday 10:00-17:00
Bank Holiday 10:00-17:00
Visit Details
Approx length of visit: 01:00
Blue Badge Guides admitted free
Groups accepted
Max group size: 40
Min group size: 10
Open outside normal opening times by appointment
Special group rates
TIC staff admitted free
Toilets

PLEASE NOTE: Gold Hill Museum is currently closed for major refurbishment and redevelopment work allowing for a complete redesign of the museum's display space. The history of the town and area will be told in seven new exhibition rooms with many interactive displays. Access to the musem will also be improved. The Museum will reopen in April 2011.

Gold Hill Museum contains exhibits of the 1100 years of the history of the town, and compliments the Shaftesbury Abbey Museum.

Perched on a hilltop with extensive views over the gentle undulating Blackmore Vale, Shaftesbury is one of England’s most scenically located and charming historic market towns.

After the Battle of Eddington in West Wiltshire in 878AD, when King Alfred the Great successfully defeated the Vikings, he set about reforming the country. Alfred was a lawmaker, administrator, scholar and religious reformer. Two of his innovations were directly responsible for the existence of Shaftesbury.

Shaftesbury was founded in c.880 and was one of the four towns in Dorset
mentioned in a document known as the Burghal Hidage. This recorded the ambitious plan that Alfred had to combine civil defence with town planning of a safe place for the local populace in times of trouble.

In 888, Alfred founded the Abbey, which was the first community for nuns not to be connected with a male community, and it became the model for other royal
nunneries. His young daughter, Aethelgifu, who had been brought up to convent life, was the first Abbess.

Objects in the museum include Anglo Saxon coins and a prime example of a
medieval alabaster. Grain measures and Dorset buttons represent some of the local trades of the town. The town’s dignitaries are represented through the town crier’s costume donated by the former town crier.

Also on view is the ‘Byzant’, a gold coloured festival totem that played a central role in the town’s water-gathering ceremony. When the Byzant ceremony started is unknown but mention of such a ceremony offering homage to the Lord of the Manor of Gillingham dates back to the dark ages.

During the 18th century it was customary for two people to dress handsomely and act the part of the Lord and Steward of the Manor at the ceremony, the date having been changed in 1622 from the Sunday before Ascension Day to the Monday. With the growth of the town a much greater volume was needed and the corporation made a bargain with the Lord of the Manor of Gillingham enabling townspeople to draw water from the springs which issue from the Northwest of Castle Hill in Enmore Green, Motcombe. To retain this right to draw water, the Mayor and Burgesses with a gathering of townspeople, had to descend to Enmore Green annually carrying ‘The Byzant’ decked with feathers, ribbons and jewels. The Lord of the Manor or his Steward received the Mayor who presented the Lord of the Manor with five tributes, the Byzant itself, a pair of gloves, two wheaten loaves, a calf’s head and a gallon of ale. After the ceremony dancing took place on the green. After these rites, the Mayor and assemble returned to the town to spend the rest of the day in revels and feasting.

Gold Hill Museum’s award-winning cottage-style garden, with spectacular views over the Blackmore Vale, offers a delightful haven within the town, where you can sit and relax.

We recommend that you visit Shaftesbury Abbey Museum & Garden before visiting Gold Hill Museum. This will enable you to get a truer picture of Shaftesbury’s Heritage.
Location

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