logo
Mudlarking exhibition featuring finds from River Thames to open in London

Mudlarking exhibition featuring finds from River Thames to open in London

Independent02-04-2025

A new mudlarking exhibition featuring historical objects found in the River Thames is opening in London.
London Museum Docklands will showcase Secrets Of The Thames: Mudlarking London's Lost Treasures, featuring rare items such as a Tudor headdress and a Viking era dagger.
The exhibition which opens on Friday explores finds from the Thames foreshore and the role of mudlarks in uncovering thousands of years of human history.
Mudlarking, which was historically a trade of the Victorian poor, has in recent years become a popular hobby among history lovers.
Marie-Louise Plum, a mudlarking enthusiast, told the PA news agency: 'The Thames is a really liminal zone where the past and the present meet, you get this convergence of different periods of time and place.
'The exhibition draws together over 50 years of mudlarking.
'They've got the Waterloo helmet and the Battersea shield on loan, which was found in the Victorian era, right up to items found in the present day.'
Kate Sumnall, curator at London Museum, said the exhibition is inspired by both the finds from the Thames foreshore and the mudlarks themselves.
' One of the key points that I really wanted to convey in this exhibition is that the Thames is a remarkable place, a holder of so many of London's secrets and the past,' she said.
'I wanted to acknowledge the role of mudlarks and their contribution towards archaeology in that they are monitoring, they're recording their finds and they are making a big difference.
'I want visitors to come away with a sense of wonder, of how we can just explore these little moments of London's past.'
The exhibition features more than 350 mudlarked objects, including a 16th century ivory sundial, and other curiosities include clay pipes, 18th century false teeth, medieval spectacles and 16th century wig curlers.
Visitors can also gain insights from mudlarks themselves and discover how finds are recorded and researched in a behind-the-scenes experience.
Early records of mudlarking date back to the mid-1800s when London's poorest communities searched the foreshore for bits of metal, rope and coal to make their living.
Today, licensed mudlarks explore the wet clay banks of the Thames to find preserved historical treasures revealed at low tide.
The hobby has grown in popularity in recent years, with the Port of London Authority (PLA) noting a significant increase in applications for licences, particularly since 2020.
On average, the London Museum's Finds Liaison Officer records around 700 finds per year and identifies around 5,000, with a small number acquired into the museum's collection.
Secrets Of The Thames: Mudlarking London's Lost Treasures will run from April 4 2025 to March 1 2026.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This beloved Soho pub is closing for good
This beloved Soho pub is closing for good

Time Out

time44 minutes ago

  • Time Out

This beloved Soho pub is closing for good

Another London boozer bites the dust. Soho pub The Shaston Arms will be shutting its doors on June 15. In a statement, brewers Hall & Woodhouse said, 'We are disappointed that after 25 wonderful years, we are sadly saying goodbye to The Shaston Arms in Carnaby. Our wish was to renew the lease on the building, but we understand that the landlord wishes to pursue a restaurant offer on Ganton Street.' Though it looked like a Victorian-era pub, The Shaston Arms actually opened in 1999, and was previously a pair of shops. Run by Dorset-based brewers Hall & Woodhouse, the name 'Shaston' was taken from the Shaftesbury-inspired town present in a number of novels by Dorset-born writer Thomas Hardy. A number of other Hall & Woodhouse pubs in London remain, including the famous Ship and Shovell by Embankment, which is split across two buildings facing each other that are joined by an underground cellar. Earlier this year another much-loved London pub closed, north-west London's Ye Olde Swiss Cottage. Want to drown your sorrows? These are the best pubs in Soho, according to us.

Film Reviews: How to Train Your Dragon  Ballerina
Film Reviews: How to Train Your Dragon  Ballerina

Scotsman

time18 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Film Reviews: How to Train Your Dragon Ballerina

Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... How to Train Your Dragon (PG) ★★★ Tornado (15) ★★ Ballerina (15) ★★★ With the bafflingly big box-office haul for Disney's current Lilo & Stitch remake once again justifying the studio's creatively dubious decision to do live-action remakes of its animation classics, it's surprising it's taken as long for other studios to follow suit. But here's DreamWorks with its own live action re-do of How to Train Your Dragon, its instant classic 2010 hit about an inventive Viking kid who rejects his dragon-slayer heritage after befriending an injured fire-breather called Toothless. How To Train Your Dragon | Universal Pictures The original film — based on the book series by Cressida Cowell — inspired two pretty decent sequels and a spin-off animated TV show; it also boasted incredible visuals and provided Gerard Butler with a rare opportunity to deploy his gruff Paisley burr as the voice of hapless hero Hiccup's burley chieftain father Stoick. Though Butler is the only returning cast member to survive the transition — he's clearly having a blast as the in-the-flesh version of his cartoon counterpoint — the film remains an oddly faithful simulacrum of the animated version. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad That's both good and bad. Good because everything that worked about the first film — the soaring visuals, the sweet bond between Hiccup and Toothless, the amusing training montages — also works this time round; bad because, well, it all feels vaguely pointless. Still, it now exists and it's not exactly a chore to sit through. After a shaky opening salvo setting up the basics of the story — the Vikings still all live on an island called Berk and are locked in an ongoing battle to protect themselves and their livestock from the dragons plundering their land for food — returning director Dean Deblois soon finds his rhythm, with Mason Thames a winning presence as the desperate-to-please Hiccup, Nico Parker feisty and fun as the more capable slayer-in-training Astrid, and Nick Frost a goofy delight as Stoick's right-hand man Gobber. But please, can we just have some new family films instead of all these redos? Jack Lowden in Tornado | Contributed It's been ten years since Scottish writer/director John Maclean's pleasingly strange debut Slow West marked the former Beta Band member out as a filmmaker with a keen sense of how to subvert classic genres like the western. Sadly, that's not quite the case with his belated follow-up film Tornado, a wilderness thriller with an intriguing samurai twist, set in an unnamed part of the British Isles in 1790, though shot primarily in Scotland. It stars Tim Roth and Jack Lowden as Sugarman and Little Sugar, the father-son leaders of a group of murderous marauders who, as the film opens, are in pursuit of a young Japanese woman. We don't yet know why, but as the film's puzzle-box structure starts to fall into place details gradually emerge: some stolen gold has gone missing during the performance of a samurai-themed touring puppet show that the woman, who goes by the name of Tornado, performs with her father Fujin, a taciturn traditionalist who wants his resistant daughter to retain a connection to their homeland (Tornado is played by rising Japanese star Kōki; Fujin by Shōgun star Takehiro Hira). Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Sign up to our FREE Arts & Culture newsletter at Their familial tension finds a harsher parallel in the relationship between Sugarman and Little Sugar, who resents his father's insistence on giving every member of the gang an equal share of the loot he apparently did the most to procure. When the two groups' paths cross in violent fashion, these simmering generational conflicts come to the fore, but only Roth — whose character's bleeding stomach wound feels like an arch tribute to his role in Reservoir Dogs — is given enough material to imbue proceedings with any real depth. The rest of the film is so vaguely sketched there's no sense of who these characters are or what this world is. Consequently, when it eventually turns into a bloody revenge movie, the action feels frustratingly stilted and repetitive, the title character never quite becoming the force of nature her name implies. Ana de Armas as Eve in Ballerina | Courtesy of Lionsgate There's much more pulpy fun to be had in Ballerina, an entertainingly ludicrous spin-off from the John Wick franchise in which Ana De Armas makes good on the action star potential glimpsed in No Time To Die to play an orphan raised in a ballet school that doubles as a front for an elite assassin training facility. Said school was first introduced in John Wick 3: Parabellum and the movie takes place in that film's timeline, with Keanu Reeves popping up in an extended cameo to recreate some scenes from that film, and a few new ones too, as De Armas's character, Eve, is encouraged to 'fight like a girl' and embark on her own kill-crazy mission to avenge her father's murder. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Though the back story is a bit rote — it's almost identical to Black Widow and the Jennifer Lawrence spy thriller Red Sparrow — the action builds to a suitably barmy showdown involving flamethrowers that kicks the whole thing up a gear.

Step into two hidden worlds beneath Edinburgh
Step into two hidden worlds beneath Edinburgh

Scotsman

timea day ago

  • Scotsman

Step into two hidden worlds beneath Edinburgh

The Lost Close and The Real Mary King's Close partner for the first time to reveal a forgotten side of Edinburgh's rich history Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... This summer, Edinburgh visitors and locals can delve beneath the city's streets and explore not one, but two of its best-kept secrets thanks to a new underground experience that unites The Real Mary King's Close and The Lost Close for the very first time. Launching on Thursday, June 19 and running every Thursday, Friday and Saturday until August 30, this exclusive dual-site tour invites guests to journey through two unique underground closes. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The experience begins at The Lost Close, where guests gather at the historic John's Coffee House - once a vibrant meeting place for Scottish Enlightenment thinkers like Adam Smith and David Hume. The Lost Close and The Real Mary King's Close's new partnership From there, guests will descend into underground vaults and a close sealed off for nearly 200 years following Edinburgh's Great Fire, only rediscovered in 2019. Guided by an expert storyteller, learn about the fascinating journey of coffee in Scotland, from its early trade roots to the rise of the city's first coffeehouses and their enduring influence today. During the tour, guests will enjoy a cup of specialty coffee from local roaster, Common Coffee, before encountering one of the most extraordinary industrial discoveries in recent Scottish history: the world's second-oldest surviving Crossley four-stroke engine. Originally installed at the Royal Aquarium and later used to ventilate the city's police chambers, this rare Victorian relic offers a remarkable glimpse into Edinburgh's innovative past. Following the 35-minute Coffee Tour at The Lost Close, the journey continues just a few steps away at The Real Mary King's Close, one of Scotland's most celebrated heritage attractions. Voted the UK's best tourist attraction in the Tripadvisor® Travellers' Choice® Awards - Best of the Best for 2024, the award-winning experience invites guests to step directly into 17th-century Edinburgh. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Led by character guides, guests explore a perfectly preserved warren of underground streets, homes and passageways that once bustled with life above ground. As the Close was gradually buried under the foundations of the Royal Exchange, its stories were sealed in time. The Lost Close, Edinburgh On the immersive one-hour tour, guests will uncover tales of plague, poverty, politics and the perseverance of residents who once called the Close home. Rich in historical detail and theatrical storytelling, The Real Mary King's Close offers an unfiltered look at Edinburgh's hidden past and the people who shaped its future. Paul Nixon, General Manager at The Real Mary King's Close, said: 'We're delighted to be partnering with The Lost Close to offer a fresh and unique way to experience Edinburgh's hidden history. This joint ticket gives our visitors a rare chance to explore two underground closes in one morning, each with its own powerful story. From coffee culture and Enlightenment thinking to industrial innovation and everyday life, it's a journey through the layers that have shaped the city we know today. We expect this to be a highly popular experience and anticipate that tickets will sell out quickly.' James Armandary, Tourism Development Lead at The Lost Close, added: 'This partnership with The Real Mary King's Close is an exciting first for us at The Lost Close. With one ticket, guests can explore two very different underground closes and uncover the rich, hidden history they share - from the story of coffee in Scotland to the everyday lives of people who once walked these streets. It's a unique way to experience Edinburgh's past from two fascinating perspectives.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Tours last approximately 1 hour 45 mins. Tickets are priced at £40, including access to both tours and a cup of coffee, making it the perfect experience to start your day. With a maximum of 12 guests per session, availability is limited, and early booking is advised.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store