The British Museum has successfully raised £3.5m to keep a gold pendant linked to King Henry VIII’s marriage to his first wife, Katherine (also Catherine) of Aragon.
The central London museum launched a fundraising appeal in October so it could permanently acquire the Tudor Heart, found by a metal detectorist in a Warwickshire field in 2019.
It has now announced that it reached its fundraising goal after receiving £360,000 in public donations and a string of donations from grants, trusts and arts organisations.
Museum director Nicholas Cullinan said: “The success of the campaign shows the power of history to spark the imagination and why objects like the Tudor Heart should be in a museum.”
Research led by the British Museum has revealed that the Tudor Heart pendant may have been made to celebrate the betrothal of their two-year-old daughter Princess Mary to the eight-month-old French heir-apparent in 1518.
The pendant unites the Tudor rose with Katherine’s pomegranate symbol and features a banner that reads “tousiors”, the old French for “always”.
After it was found, the pendant was reported under the Treasure Act 1996, which gives museums and galleries in England a chance to acquire historical objects and put them on display.
In order to put the pendant on permanent display, the museum had to pay a reward to the metal detectorist who made the discovery and the owner of the land it was found on.
The museum was keen to keep the Tudor Heart as it believed that few artefacts related to Henry VIII’s marriage to Katherine of Aragon have survived.
Since the appeal, it said, more than 45,000 members of the public had contributed to the cause, helping it raise just over 10% of its £3.5m goal.
It also received £1.75m from The National Heritage Memorial Fund, which aims to save the UK’s most outstanding, at-risk heritage treasures.
Other donors include the charity Art Fund, the Julia Rausing Trust and The American Friends of the British Museum.
Cullinan said: “I want to say a heartfelt thank you to everyone who supported our campaign.
“The fact 45,000 members of the public have got behind this and donated money to keep it on the country on public display shows the enthusiasm for this object – it really is unique.
“I think this is such an important part of our history. Very little survives around the marriage of Katherine of Aragon to Henry VIII.”
Simon Thurley, chairman of the National Heritage Memorial Fund, said: “The Tudor Heart is an extraordinary insight into the culture of Henry VIII’s court, and I am delighted that Memorial Fund support will enable it to go on public display.”
The museum hopes to formally include the pendant in the collection later this year and has plans for it to tour the UK in the future.
Source:
www.graphic.com.gh

