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Ellmers Gallery
Wed - Sun, 10am - 5pm
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Entry to the exhibition is included with a free ticket to the museum - book online now.
The largest ever Bronze Age hoard to be discovered in London has been unearthed in Havering. This significant find is the focal point of our major new exhibition, Havering Hoard: A Bronze Age Mystery.
Weapons including axe heads, spearheads, fragments of swords, daggers and knives, alongside some other unusual objects rarely found in the UK, make up a total of 453 bronze objects dating between c.900 and c.800 BC that will be on display as part of the exhibition.
This intriguing discovery raises numerous questions about not just the objects themselves but about the people who buried them. Could this treasure have been a religious offering? Were they hoping to recycle the metal or control access to the material? Was it a rejection of bronze tools as iron technology emerged?
Now it's your chance to share in the mystery of the hoard and discover what life was like during the Bronze Age, when the land where London now exists was a very different place.
With thanks to Historic England, Archaeological Solutions Ltd and Havering Museum for their support.
“You will find yourself lured into the world of an unfurling mystery”
The Times
“An eerie marvel”
The Daily Telegraph
Ellmers Gallery
Accessible via ramp
Are you an intrepid archaeologist or more of a mysterious metalworker at heart? Find out in a brand new quiz inspired by Havering Hoard: A Bronze Age Mystery.
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Kate Sumnall, curator of Havering Hoard at the Museum of London Docklands, tells us about the making of the exhibition, from discovery of the hoard to display.
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Discover why the inconspicuous axe was such an important tool during the Bronze Age.
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Watch the methods used by Bronze Age metal workers in this short video.
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