COR300
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DEV147
E1921
Once belonging to the Shuar culture, the tayu ukunch´in the shuar chicham language means "tayu bone", referring to its main raw material.
172/2000
Traditionally, beads are used to communicate messages and ideas.
466/2008
This is the badge for the hockey team of a school in Exeter.
9/2012/5
The Primrose League was a conservative political movement, founded in 1883.
9/2012/6
439/2008
This is the cricket club badge worn by a pupil of the Exeter Modern School in 1911.
2/1958/2/2
This brass badge is from from the cap of a Royal Flying Corps uniform.
7/2012/6
Devon special constable badge donated by RAMM curator Bertie Gay.
7/2012/7
The Constitutional Club in Exeter was based in Bedford Circus, one of the wealthiest areas of the city and was closely allied to the Conservative party.
6/2021
Metal badge made to celebrate the NHS during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic.
287/1989/1
62/1921/3
This badge would have been worn by a fireman employed by the West of England Assurance Company.
962/1904/12
This badge was worn by a porter working at Exeter quay.
2/1958/2/1
This embroidered badge is a pilot’s wings, worn on the uniform of the Royal Flying Corps.
90/1953
At the centre of this Devonshire regiment badge is a lion, surrounded by laurel leaves and surmounted by a crown.
40/1990/45
Group secretary badge for the Exeter and Western Hospital Aid Society.
atemp655
Commemorative badge celebrating King Edward VII’s coronation.
64/1991
This badge was issued to an official of the Royal Institute of Public Health at their meeting in Exeter in 1902.
V4404
This is a royal marines cap badge with a royal crest of England, a crowned golden lion statant standing on an Imperial crown, which was replaced in 1953 by the Queen for St.
144/1998/3
The image at the centre of the Devonshire regiment badge is the Exeter city emblem of the castle and motto ‘Semper Fidelis’.
962/1904/7
962/1904/14
962/1904/8
962/1904/1
962/1904/13
962/1904/5
106/2000/16
This shoulder bag is formed of four rectangular panels of green brocade.
175/2000
Harakeke and kiekie plant fibres are long and strong enough to be dyed and woven into baskets and bags.