Woke madness as academic claims British Museum is
promoting 'unrelenting fascist imagery'
Commentator Benedict Spence said he is
"yearning" for the comments to be a joke "for their sakes and
ours".
By CIARAN
MCGRATH, Senior News Reporter
22:12, Mon,
Mar 4, 2024 | UPDATED: 23:29, Mon, Mar 4, 2024
https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1873652/british-museum-romans-legion-fascist-imagery-sexism
The British Museum's new exhibition opened last month
An
archaeologist has triggered a scathing response with her claim that Legion, the
British Museum’s latest exhibition, features “unrelenting fascist imagery and
sexism”.
The
museum’s major new show, billed as offering an insight into life in the Roman
Army 2,000 years ago, opened to rave reviews last month.
However, Dr
Claire Millington, a Visiting Research Fellow at King's College London, was
less impressed.
Posting on
X, formerly Twitter, yesterday she shared a screengrab from the museum’s
official Instagram account which shared a picture from the event, proclaiming:
“Girlies if you’re single and looking for a man, this is your sign to go the
British Museum’s new exhibition Life in the Roman Army and walk around looking
confused you’re welcome x.”
Dr
Millington commented: “Unrelenting fascist imagery and sexism dolloped on top.
This is the BM’s insta today.”
Historian
and author Dr Robin Douglas said: “Various people are knee-jerking at Claire's
tweet. (All men, from what I've seen.)
“One can
debate whether retweeting the BM's post is wise, but the militaristic framing
of this exhibition does seem quite problematic.
“And there
is a distinctly fascistic aesthetic to that picture.”
However,
commentator Benedict Spence was unconvinced, writing: “An archaeologist has
complained the Roman legionary exhibition at the British Museum contains
“unrelenting fascist imagery” and once again I am proposing we just close half
the universities, the experiment has clearly failed."
“The
‘militaristic framing’ of an exhibition on… Roman legionaries. ‘Fascist
aesthetic’.
“I am
*yearning* for it to be a joke, for their sakes and ours.”
Tom Jones,
a Tory councillor on North Yorkshire Council, was similarly unimpressed in his
reply to Dr Millington’s post, commenting: “The majority of the population, who
are normal, will enjoy this exhibition, because they are normal.”
The museum
describes the exhibition as exploring “the reality of daily life for the men,
women and children who were part of the machine which allowed Rome to master
its vast empire”.
The Roman
empire stretched from Scotland to the Red Sea, with the exhibition intended to
“challenge some of the perceptions about what it meant to be a Roman soldier by
showing the army was as much an engine of social change as a formidable war
machine”.
Richard
Abdy, Curator of Roman and Iron Age coins, comments: “This is a really exciting
opportunity to present an epic subject on a human scale.
“Every
soldier has a story: it’s incredible that these tales are nearly 2000 years
old.”
Sir Mark
Jones, Interim Director of the British Museum, said: “The story of the Roman
army is more than just pitched battles and war. Legion: life in the Roman army
is a chance to show different perspectives and showcase the lives of the men,
women, and children who formed one of the most famous armed forces in the
world.”

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