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Ep 158: Excavating Bull Ring Market with Steve Thomson

Ep 158: Excavating Bull Ring Market with Steve Thomson

Released Monday, 26th April 2021
Good episode? Give it some love!
Ep 158: Excavating Bull Ring Market with Steve Thomson

Ep 158: Excavating Bull Ring Market with Steve Thomson

Ep 158: Excavating Bull Ring Market with Steve Thomson

Ep 158: Excavating Bull Ring Market with Steve Thomson

Monday, 26th April 2021
Good episode? Give it some love!
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Bull Ring market in Birmingham, England, UK was first known as Corn Cheaping because in the 12th century, which is when we have the first reference to Corn Cheaping, it was used as a corn market. Corn Cheaping had an iron ring setup on a grassy section of Corn Cheaping that was used as a bull baiting arena, where bulls who had been selected for slaughter would be tied and baited for entertainment before being processed into meat. That’s where the name Bull Ring Market comes from. Today, in the 21st century, Bull Ring Market is still being used as an open air market, selling fish, meat, poultry, exotic vegetables, and even household supplies. But how did the market get from the 12th century to today, and why has the original purpose survived so many centuries? Headland Archaeology discovered some answers about the history of Bull Ring Market when they conducted an archaeological dig at Beorma Quarter, close to Bull Ring Market. Today, our guest, Steve Thomson, lead archaeologist for this project, is here today to share with us what they found during Phase 1 of their excavation of Bull Ring Market and what that tells us about how the space was being used in Shakespeare’s lifetime. Get bonus episodes on Patreon

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