Heritage Open Day: Free entry to a fine, historic town house in Glastonbury. Dating from the late 15th century, the house is also the home of the Iron Age 'Glastonbury Lake Village' collection and an award-winning garden. Glastonbury Tribunal is believed to have originally been a medieval merchant's house. It has many original features such as the entrance door, oak framed and decorative plaster ceilings and stone fireplaces. There have been alterations over the years and it has served a variety of functions in its lifetime, including town vicarage, boy's school and even a small convent. The back door leads to a stone courtyard and the garden, which is an oasis of calm on Glastonbury's busy high street. It is home to the Lake Village exhibition, a highly significant collection of Iron Age artefacts excavated locally in 1892, giving a wonderful insight into daily life more than 1000 years ago.