Oxford is full of things to see such as medieval colleges and a lovely stretch of the Thames.
Of course, you can find similar sights in other parts of England,
although not in such a dense concentration that makes Oxford a perfect day trip from London. The one thing Oxford has that is truly unique is the Pitt Rivers Museum. (click below to read more)
The Pitt Rivers is laid out the way museums used to be: cabinets packed
with artifacts and the walls and even the ceiling adorned with totem
poles, statues, shields, spears, and canoes. Even when it opened in the
1880s it was a bit different from other museums, though. Instead of the
displays being organized by region and period, they're organized by use.
For example, one case has fire-making equipment, ranging from simple
wooden tools used by Australian Aborigines to matches from 19th century
Europe to rather dangerous-looking lighters from a hundred years ago.
The collection started with a donation in 1884 of 20,000 objects collected by anthropologist Lt.-Gen. Augustus Henry Lane Fox Pitt Rivers. He was interested in how different cultures solved the same problems, such as lighting a fire, creating currency, or dealing with the dead. The collection has now grown to half a million artifacts from pretty much every culture and time period.
You name it, they have it. Egyptian mummy? Check. Inuit snow goggles? Check. Witch in a bottle? Check. Helmet made from a blowfish? Check. They even have a nice collection of shrunken heads.
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