Museum of Classical Archaeology, Adelaide
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The Museum of Classical Archaeology is the teaching collection of the Department of Classics, Archaeology and Ancient History at the University of Adelaide in South Australia.


As early as 1910, H. Darnley Naylor,[1] the Hughes Professor of Classics at the University of Adelaide, anticipated that a future and "much-needed classical and historical museum"[2] would incorporate a recent donation of ancient coins to the university. Further coin collections were added in the 1920s and 1930s. It was only in the 1960s, however, that the Classics Department acquired a display case and a small collection of antiquities, mostly Greek pottery, which had been housed within the department. As the teaching of Greek and Roman archaeology grew at Adelaide, so too did the collection. In 1979, students and staff created a large model of Athens for a temporary exhibition within the university. By 1980, the collection had outgrown its location, and the university agreed to locate it within the grand Henry Basten Room, upstairs in the historic Mitchell Building on North Terrace. It opened to the public in 1983, under the directorship of Dr Frank Sear. Staffing was provided by the department.
In addition to objects owned by the university, the new Museum of Classical Archaeology[3] included Greek and Roman objects on long-term loans from the store-rooms of the South Australian Museum and the Art Gallery of South Australia. This generous collaboration continues to this day. The Greek community in Adelaide has long supported the department in its teaching and outreach activities. The committee of the longstanding Greek Glendi Festival[4] donated some forty casts of Classical and Hellenistic sculptures from the Greek Government.
To celebrate the opening of the museum in 1983, the University Foundation funded the acquisition of a Corinthian bronze helmet – a type that was popular in the 6th century BC – whilst Professor A. D. Trendall donated a Campanian late Classical lekythos by the Pagenstecher Group. The "Friends of the Museum" was also launched at the opening, to support the outreach programme of public talks about classical archaeology, and to raise money for further acquisitions. An opportunity presented itself the next year, when the personal collection of the late Arthur Dannatt came on the market in Adelaide. With the substantial support of the Friends, his collection was added to the museum in its entirety. In so doing, the museum expanded its cultural horizons, for Dannatt had acquired not only Greek, Etruscan and Roman small objects, but also objects from Egypt and Mesopotamia.
In the early 1990s, Sear took up the Chair of Classics at the University of Melbourne. Under the directorship of his successor, Dr. Margaret O'Hea, Near Eastern cultures have been added to the museum, including material donated by Sydney University's excavations at Pella. The museum continues to grow as a result of private donations. Financial considerations in the 1990s made it impossible to continue to keep the museum open, but school groups can pay to visit the museum, and in recent years, the enthusiasm of the Alumni Volunteers of the university have made it possible to re-open the museum on the first Tuesday of the month during the academic year. The museum now has a Facebook page, and public archaeology lectures in Adelaide are advertised there and on Eventbrite.
