A north Cumbrian museum has announced that it is the first organisation along Hadrian’s Wall to visibly carry the UNESCO, World Heritage emblem.

By promoting the UNESCO emblem, Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery in Carlisle, aim to promote the significance of Hadrian’s Wall as a World Heritage Site.

A significant amount of the Roman archaeology held by Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery is from Hadrian’s Wall, the forts, milecastles and settlements that surrounded the fortification.

The Museum also has two permanent galleries devoted to explaining what life was like in the far north western edge of the Roman Empire.

Tullie House Museum Director, Andrew Mackay, said: “The museum is a major repository for the rich archaeology associated with Hadrian’s Wall and so it’s really important to remind people of the significance of the collection and the importance of the Roman Empire.

“It is easy to forget that Hadrian’s Wall is just as important as places like the Taj Mahal or the Great Wall of China. Hopefully, the UNESCO emblem will go some way towards reminding people of the rich heritage on their doorstep.”

The United Nations organisation, UNESCO, was created in London in 1945 with the aim of helping to build lasting peace through education, science, and culture.

Its 1972 ‘World Heritage Convention’, an international agreement based on the premise that certain places on Earth are of such outstanding universal value that they should form part of the common heritage of humankind, remains its most successful international treaty.

UNESCO Chair in Cultural Property Protection and Peace at Newcastle University, Prof Peter Stone OBE, said: “The World Heritage designation is not given lightly and is seen as a statement of a site’s universal value to all people.

“Tullie House should be very proud to be carrying it. Displaying the UNESCO emblem signals to visitors - especially international visitors - that Tullie House plays an important role in promoting world heritage and UNESCO’s primary mission to encourage peace through understanding and promoting the world’s diverse cultures.”

Hadrian’s Wall formed part of the frontier of the Roman Empire, which encompassed much of Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa.

The Wall was inscribed as a World Heritage Site in 1987.

Chair of the Hadrian’s Wall Partnership Board, Jane, Lady Gibson, said: “We are very pleased to see the UNESCO emblem on Tullie House Museum. “It seems very timely as we make plans to celebrate 1900 years of continuous history of this special place. “We have one of the world’s most famous landmarks in our fields, villages, towns and cities.

“We should all be very proud to have such a strong heritage and grateful that we have organisations like Tullie House Museum there to safeguard many precious artefacts for future generations.”