History of The British Museum
History of The British Museum
The British Museum was founded in 1753, the first national public museum in the world. From
the beginning it granted free admission to all 'studious and curious persons'. Visitor numbers
have grown from around 5,000 a year in the eighteenth century to nearly 6 million today.
History of the British Museum
The eighteenth century: origins of the British Museum
The origins of the British Museum lie in the will of the physician, naturalist and collector, Sir
Hans Sloane (16601753).
Over his lifetime, Sloane collected more than 71,000 objects which he wanted to be preserved
intact after his death. So he bequeathed the whole collection to King George II for the nation in
return for a payment of 20,000 to his heirs.
The gift was accepted and on 7 June 1753, an Act of Parliament established the British Museum.
The founding collections largely consisted of books, manuscripts and natural specimens with
some antiquities (including coins and medals, prints and drawings) and ethnographic material. In
1757 King George II donated the 'Old Royal Library' of the sovereigns of England and with it
the privilege of copyright receipt.
The British Museum opened to the public on 15 January 1759 . It was first housed in a
seventeenth-century mansion, Montagu House, in Bloomsbury on the site of today's building.
Entry was free and given to all studious and curious Persons.
With the exception of two World Wars, the Museum has remained open ever since, gradually
increasing its opening hours and moving from an attendance of 5,000 per year to today's 6
million.
The nineteenth century: expansion and discovery
In the early part of the nineteenth century there were a number of high profile acquisitions.
These included the Rosetta Stone (1802), theTownley collection of classical sculpture (1805),
and the Parthenon sculptures (1816).
In 1823 the gift to the nation by George IV of his father's library (the King's Library) prompted
the construction of today's quadrangular building designed by Sir Robert Smirke (17801867).
By 1857, both the quadrangular building and the round Reading Roomhad been constructed.
To make more room for the increasing collections held by the Museum, the natural history
collections were moved to a new building in South Kensington in the 1880s. This became the
Natural History Museum.
The Museum was involved in much excavation abroad. Its Assyrian collections formed the basis
for the understanding of cuneiform (an ancient Middle Eastern script). In the same way the
Rosetta Stone had resulted in the unlocking of Egyptian hieroglyphic script (a symbol-based
script).
A key figure during this period was Sir Augustus Wollaston Franks (182697). Appointed to the
Museum in 1851, he was the first person to be responsible for British and medieval material.
Franks expanded the collection in new directions, collecting not only British and medieval
antiquities but also prehistoric, ethnographic and archaeological material from Europe and
beyond as well as oriental art and objects.
Visitor numbers increased greatly during the nineteenth century. The Museum attracted crowds
of all ages and social classes, particularly on public holidays.
Alongside their academic work, curators took an interest in broadening the Museum's appeal
through lectures, improving the displays and writing popular guides to the collections.