Visit the John Elliott Classics Museum

Discover the John Elliot Classics Museum in the University of Tasmania.

Delivery

On campus

When

Term 1 to 4

Cohort

Primary, secondary, senior secondary

Where

Sandy Bay campus

Capacity

Dependent on chosen group activities

About the program

The John Elliott Classics Museum, located at our Sandy Bay Campus, is the perfect field trip for school classes studying History or Ancient Worlds. The museum offers students the opportunity to experience a significant and valuable collection of ancient artefacts from Egypt, Greece and Rome.

Founded in 1954 as a teaching resource, the collection explores the development of ancient Greek artistic styles through the medium of pottery decoration. The collection has expanded over the years to include artefacts and coins from Egypt, Mesopotamia, Greece, Etruria and Rome, with objects ranging in date from the 4th millennium BC to the 6th century AD. It now contains over 300 artefacts and 500 ancient coins.

Items of special significance include a pair of white-ground lekythoi (funerary pots) decorated with rare dynamic military scenes, along with the ‘name vases’ of two ancient artists, named respectively for their location in Hobart and to honour the museum’s founder: the Hobart Painter and the Elliott Painter.

If you or your school are interested in an excursion to the John Elliott Classics Museum, appointments can be made through the Museum Keeper.

The University of Tasmania is committed to creating diverse, inclusive, and accessible educational experiences. Please let us know when registering how we can best support your needs.

Links to the Australian Curriculum

Critical and creative thinking

General capability

Intercultural understanding

General capability

Asia and Australia's Engagement with Asia

Cross-curriculum priorities