I managed to get back and see the Hadrian exhibition at the British Museum. The reading room in which it is held is of course an appropriate venue as Hadrian’s Pantheon inspired its dome.
Timed tickets should have been a warning – the space was probably full to its designed capacity. For me the outstanding impact was the representation of Hadrian throughout his rule – each artist created a sculpture of a man whom the “vir in via” must have been able to recognize if they had walked past him.

It was wonderful that among the marble the curators included a written plea for support, from a foreign civilian living in northern England, to the region's governor. Perhaps the same man had touched a large amphora, found near Hadrian’s Wall, which was displayed along with an image of a shard mountain of 26million amphora.
Later, walking along Bond Street, I was surprised to see a familiar shop name. ‘Bateel’, a shop selling Dates and Date products has a branch in Muscat; amazingly they had set up close to the location a company I was general manager with 25 years ago had a shop. My surprise was not really in seeing Bateel but - with a rental of probably GBP300,000+ per year - the extraordinary volume of dates they must sell to cover costs - Arab Embassies must be great clients - http://blog.omanholiday.co.uk/blog/_archives/2008/8/31/3862311.html