This event has now finished.
  • Date and time: Sunday 9 June 2024, 11am to 12pm
  • Location: In-person only
    Law and Sociology Building, Campus East, University of York (Map)
  • Admission: Free admission, booking required

Event details

Join archaeologist and broadcaster Julian Richards for a family-friendly artefact-handling workshop and experience the past through a range of senses.

Archaeology is all about people like us – it’s a way of finding out about their lives through the objects they left behind. During the session, you’ll examine objects from prehistory to comparatively recent times, and explore how they were made and used, and the stories they might tell.

Come along as we bring the past to life through touch, sounds and even smells!

This session is suitable for anyone aged 7+.

Image credit: Harvey Mills

About the speaker

Julian Richards is an archaeologist and broadcaster who has devised and taught many courses for the visually impaired. He specialises in the prehistory of Britain and has a long-standing involvement with Stonehenge. He has directed major fieldwork projects and worked in both commercial archaeology and for English Heritage before a career change to broadcasting and education. Julian presented programmes for the BBC, both on TV (Meet the Ancestors and Blood of the Vikings on BBC2) and on radio (Mapping the Town on Radio 4). Julian is passionate about bringing the past to life and is involved in writing, devising and delivering community archaeology projects, working with schools, making non-broadcast film and curating museum exhibitions.

Partners

University of York

Venue details

  • Wheelchair accessible