
Expansion plans at Lochaber's West Highland Museum
The West Highland Museum in Fort William could be expanded to create more space for visitors and exhibitions. Planning permission is being sought to partially demolish an old dairy building behind the museum so an extension can be built. Trustees hope to secure £4.5m of funding for the redevelopment project. The museum in the town's Cameron Square is popular with fans of the Outlander books and TV series who come to see its large collection of objects associated with the Jacobite cause.
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BBC News
7 hours ago
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Crystal jar from Viking treasure hoard to go on show in Kirkcudbright
A rock crystal jar from a significant Viking hoard discovered near Dumfries will be displayed for the first time later this Galloway Hoard was unearthed in a field by metal detectorist Derek McLennan in 2014 and is thought to be one of the most important archaeological finds in the UK this about AD 900, it contained a variety of objects and materials, including pendants, brooches, bracelets and relics. The jar, which resembles an ornate perfume bottle decorated in gold embellishments, will go on display at Kirkcudbright Galleries on 8 November. National Museums Scotland, which acquired the collection in 2017, said the jar was wrapped in linen and placed in a silk-lined leather pouch, before being packed into a larger lidded vessel with more than 20 other several months, the object was carefully separated from the textile - a rare medieval survival itself which is believed to include Scotland's earliest example of and other precious textile survivals had to be conserved with care, so the jar has never been available for display jar is thought to relate to the Christian church or its clergy and has a Latin inscription written in gold which translates as "Bishop Hyguald had me made". National Museums Scotland said due to gaps in church records in the 9th century, when the hoard is thought to have been buried, it had not been possible to identify Hyguald or exactly where he was based. Dr Martin Goldberg from National Museums Scotland said: "The rock crystal jar is one of the highlight objects from the Galloway Hoard. "From the beautiful rock crystal itself, originally carved in the form of a classical Corinthian column two thousand years ago, to the incredibly intricate gold decoration added hundreds of years later and including a clear inscription identifying its owner, this one object exemplifies the complex, connected and historic nature of the Galloway Hoard. "The jar was the subject of international attention when we first revealed the inscription, and it's great to be able to put it on display it for the first time in Kirkcudbright." Most of the Galloway Hoard is currently on display as part of an international tour which began earlier this showing at the South Australian Museum in Adelaide is due to close in July, as the collection moves to Melbourne for the next leg of the tour.


BBC News
8 hours ago
- BBC News
Expansion plans at Lochaber's West Highland Museum
The West Highland Museum in Fort William could be expanded to create more space for visitors and exhibitions. Planning permission is being sought to partially demolish an old dairy building behind the museum so an extension can be built. Trustees hope to secure £4.5m of funding for the redevelopment project. The museum in the town's Cameron Square is popular with fans of the Outlander books and TV series who come to see its large collection of objects associated with the Jacobite cause.


BBC News
10 hours ago
- BBC News
Memorial statue to lost North Sea divers unveiled in Aberdeen
A statue commemorating divers who have lost their lives in the North Sea energy industry has been unveiled in Aberdeen. A dedication service was held at the weekend to mark the installation of the memorial. It is estimated more than 100 divers have lost their lives since the inception of the oil and gas industry in the 1970s. The statue, by sculptor Alan Herriot, overlooks the harbour at Pocra Quay. It was commissioned in 2023 by the North Sea Divers Memorial charity. Depicting a man in a diving suit and helmet, it sits atop a granite plinth which reads: "Dedicated to all divers who lost their lives in the North Sea Offshore Energy Industry". Mr Herriot, one of Scotland's best-known figurative sculptors, has other work in made the statue of Scottish football legend Denis Law outside Provost Skene's House, and one portraying King Robert the Bruce outside Marischal College. The weekend's dedication service was attended by some of those who have worked in the industry, including people from across the UK and diver James McLean, a North Sea Divers Memorial trustee, said that none of the deaths over the years had been in vain, as they led to tighter safety said "We know the impact of those losses, and it's very personal for us. "It's been an emotional journey the last couple of years, and sitting looking at the diver we agreed we've almost lived with all those souls over the last two years."Mr McLean added: "It's doffing our cap, remembering friends and colleagues and others who died over the decades, not just in oil and gas but also in the renewable energy industry."