History online

  • Post category:Events

Travel through time
Delve through 14 billion years of history with this incredible interactive timeline based on wikipedia entries! Or take a multimedia experience through time, continents and cultures, featuring some of the most fascinating objects in human history at the British Museum. Jump back in time to explore objects from across diverse cultures and listen to curators sharing their insights.

Sneak peaks
Some of our favourite HODs events have produced virtual tours of their sites, for you to explore without even being there. Peak inside the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery and discover over 40 galleries which display art, social history and archaeology. Or tour the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford which houses over 600,000 objects, photographs and manuscripts from almost every country in the world and from all periods of human existence.

 

Family Fun

With schools now closed, we know many families are looking for ideas to keep children entertained. Why not try a bit of colouring to release that inner-child? Check out these incredible free colouring books provided by libraries, archives, and other cultural institutions. Or if you’re struggling to keep the kids active, the Woodland Trust have created some great nature-based activities you can enjoy together at home or in your garden.

 

 

 

 

Broadcast
If you’ve exhausted all of your films & box sets then check out ARTE, the free European culture TV channel where you can stream cultural documentaries, films and concerts. Or if you’re seeking some bedtime soundbites our favourite podcast is ‘A history of the world through 100 objects’ with former British Museum director Neil MacGregor.

Collections
Although National Trust houses, gardens and parks are temporarily closed, this doesn’t stop you from using their online resources to visit the collections in their care. Our favourite is the Treasures of Osterley, which presents the precious works of art acquired by a family of bankers, as they rose to fame and fortune during Britain’s Financial Revolution.
Or use this spare time to find your favourite object in the largest collection technology, engineering and medicine items in the Science Museum’s online experiences.

Make History
History is being written all the time, and never more so than right now in these unprecedented days – so keeping a record of your everyday experiences will be really useful, not to mention interesting to future historians. Brilliant HODs organisers at Headstone Manor Museum have a diary template they are encouraging people to use.