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Archaeologists to dig up Shakespeares rubbish E-mail
December, 02 2009
 

This page is viewed 801 times

Times Online

A team of archaeologists began digging on the site of Shakespeare's last home yesterday in a search for clues that might reveal more about his life.

Archaeologists dig at Shakespeare's home at New Place, Stratford Upon Avon

They hope to discover remains of clothing, documents and even household waste. The dig is at New Place, where he lived from 1597 until his death in 1616.

Richard Kemp, of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, said: "We are hoping to find organic debris that will teach us what the great man had for dinner. Our dream find would be the first draft of The Tempest, which we know Shakespeare did write here."

Kevin Coll, who is leading the dig, said: "This is the most exciting thing I have ever worked on. To be able to learn more about a single person, who most people can still relate to, is frankly thrilling.

"We are hoping to discover things that will tell us something about Shakespeare's everyday life and if we succeed it will be incredibly exciting.

"You can tell a huge amount a person by going through what they threw away and we think we'll be able to get some of that here.

"We want to find waterlogged areas that will have perfectly preserved animal bones, textiles and documents.

"It is very possible we can find parchments if the conditions in the grounds are as good as we're hoping.

The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust says that it will provide information for a large archaeological project in 2010.

The house was razed to the ground by an eccentric later owner, Reverend Francis Gastrell. In 1759 he attacked a tree planted by Shakespeare, provoking other Stratford residents to smash his windows.

A Victorian antiquarian, James Halliwell-Phillipps, excavated parts of the site in 1862 but modern techniques are expected to yield better results.



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