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Three new galleries will showcase more than 1,500 historic items

Assistant conservator Emma Davey with a 19th-century Chinese painting

More than 1,500 historic items, 40 per cent of which have not been on display for at least a generation, are being readied to take their place in three new galleries that will open at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh on 8 February

Ancient Egypt Rediscovered covers 3,000 years of history, highlighting the stories of individuals to help engage visitors with this remarkable civilisation. Objects on display will include the only intact royal burial group outside of Egypt, the only double coffin ever discovered in Egypt and a cosmetics box which is one of the finest examples of decorative woodwork to survive from ancient Egypt. The gallery will also chart the unique contribution made by Scots to the development of Egyptology.

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History Scotland
Jan - Feb 2019
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History Scotland
FROM THE EDITOR
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New research suggests ‘certain and possible examples’ of human sacrifice in Viking Age Britain and Ireland
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David Freeman charts the progress of an ongoing project to restore a magnificent mausoleum built for a fiercely private soldier who went to great lengths to ensure his final resting place would be an imposing building where he could lie in solitary splendour
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This month Neil McLennan visits Inverness and surrounds, using the history of his ancestral clan as a springboard for his explorations
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GOLD IN PREHISTORIC SCOTLAND
Dr Alison Sheridan introduces a new joint project to explore what we know – and what we have yet to discover – about early gold use in Britain
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Christopher Fleet, map curator at National Library of Scotland, presents three very different maps which help tell the story of how the nation has been defended – and threatened – over the centuries
THE ROMAN CAVALRY IN SCOTLAND
John Richardson of the Antonine Guard society describes the history of the Roman cavalry in Scotland
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Sky above, Skye below
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Malcolm Archibald delves into the lives of Dundee’s whaling seamen, a group traditionally reviled as rough and uncouth, but who in fact emerge as hard-working (if also hard-playing) professionals, and moreover as men for whom their relationships with women were of central importance
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In the opening half of a two-part study, Dr David Taylor tells the story of the Robertsons, a group of brothers from Badenoch who emigrated to Van Diemen’s Land – modern Tasmania – in the early 19th century, hoping to strike it rich as farmers
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