A chance to get close to small Tudor and Stuart coins in our Making a Nation exhibition with a special talk by Richard Kelleher, Exhibition Curator and Assistant Keeper of Coins and Medals. Afterwards create your own topical currency, with a twist, back in the Studio.

BOOKING ESSENTIAL. To register your interest tel: 01223 332904 or email: education@fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk. Places will be confirmed on receipt of payment.

Take inspiration from our Oscar Murillo: Violent Amnesia exhibition and get creative!

FREE, drop-in and have a go
No booking required

Kettle's Yard is open all Easter weekend, Friday – Monday, 11am – 5pm. 

Natural history museums are magical places. They inspire awe and wonder in the natural world and help us understand our place within the animal kingdom. But they are places for people, made by people. To what extent do they realistically represent nature?

Join the Museum's Curator of Insects Dr Ed Turner as he introduces the insects, their diversity, factors driving declines in insect numbers and what conservation biologists, both in Cambridge and elsewhere, are doing to conserve insects.

How did this impact the expanding trade in wildlife products at the time?

Booking essential

Booking essential

Booking essential

Since its foundation, Cambridge University Botanic Garden has been a focus and stimulus for science in the University.

This research showcase aims to engage visitors to the Garden with the relatively unexplored, yet vital relationships between plants and below ground organisms. Plants would not have been able to emerge onto land approximately 470 million years ago, without the help of mycorrhizae and most plants surviving today are still dependent on their fungal partners in various ways.

Since its foundation, Cambridge University Botanic Garden has been a focus and stimulus for science in the University.

This research showcase aims to engage visitors to the Garden with the relatively unexplored, yet vital relationships between plants and below ground organisms. Plants would not have been able to emerge onto land approximately 470 million years ago, without the help of mycorrhizae and most plants surviving today are still dependent on their fungal partners in various ways.

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