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  • 11/03/2010 Ropery Hall, Barton - Battle Of Britain 7.30pm £3
  • 12/03/2010 Ropery Hall, Barton - Edward Fox 7.30pm £15/17otd
  • 12/03/2010 Wilderspin School - Quiz Night 7.30pm £5 per team
  • 13/03/2010 Far Ings National Nature Reserve - Darwin the Geologist 2 - 4pm
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Various images of the South Humber Collection

Places to visit

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2. St Peter’s Church

St Peter’s Church St Peter’s Church
St Peter’s Church
St Peter’s Church
English Heritage

USEFUL INFORMATION

Opening Times
1 Apr – 31 Mar
Sat – Mon 11 am – 3 pm.
Closed, 24 – 26 Dec 1 Jan.

Admission Charges
Adult £3, Children £1.50, Concession £2.60
Free to English Heritage members.

Directions
Barton upon Humber, North Lincolnshire DN18 5EX. In Barton upon Humber town centre.

Facilities
Exhibition  Exhibition
Family Learning  Family Learning
No Dogs (Guide dogs only)  No Dogs (Guide dogs only)
Shop  Shop
Suitable for Disabled  Suitable for Disabled
WC  WC

Further Information
Call 01652 632516
www.english-heritage.org.uk

With a history spanning over a millennium, St Peter's Church is among the most important historic buildings in England. It combines a remarkably complete Anglo-Saxon tower and rare baptistry, dating mainly from c. 970, with a tall and impressive medieval nave and chancel displaying a range of architectural styles. This much studied church is an archaeological as well as an architectural treasure-trove. The analysis of 2,800 burials here, during the nine centuries dating from Anglo-Saxon to Victorian times, has yielded unprecedented insights into medieval disease and diet, and medical and burial practices.

St Peter's is now open after a major £600,000 conservation, repair and interpretation project. Buried Lives, a new interactive exhibition, offers greater understanding of this important church and the archaeological revelations it has produced. These include the facts that both arthritis and polio were prevalent in the once-important port of Barton-upon-Humber, and that although its medieval children grew more slowly than today's, its adults were almost as tall as modern people. It features three reconstructed skeletons, the earliest of a man probably born in the reign of King Canute, and now restored to its rare original oak coffin. All the bones excavated here between 1978 and 1984 have now been returned to a specially-built 'ossuary', allowing them to rest on consecrated ground, yet remain available for research.

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