British Museum

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  • Japanese: 大英博物館 (Daiei hakubutsukan)

The British Museum is one of the world's oldest and most extensive encyclopedic museums of world cultures.


The museum, located in the Bloomsbury neighborhood of London, was founded in 1753 and began with a collection of 71,000 items bequeathed to the nation by Sir Hans Sloane, who died that same year. The newly-founded Museum also acquired that same year the personal collection of Chinese and Japanese prints of Dutch East India Company medical officer Engelbert Kaempfer, who had resided in Nagasaki in 1690-1692. Portions of Sloane's collection were later split off and form the core of the collections of the British Library and National Museum of Natural History, London.

In 1881, the Museum obtained the Japanese art collection of Dr. William Anderson, an instructor at the Imperial Navy Medical College in Tokyo, and named him curator.[1] Another notable collection of Japanese and other artifacts now in the Museum's collection came from William Gowland, one of the first Westerners to conduct archaeological excavations of kofun in the late 19th century.[2] Thomas Watters, Acting Consul General for the United Kingdom in Seoul from 1887 to 1888, also donated a notable collection of Asian art and artifacts to the Museum in 1888.[3]

Select List of Notable Works in the Collection

References

  1. Gallery label, "Minamoto Yoshitsune in training," British Museum.[1]; Gallery label, "Tengu harassing King Sojobo," British Museum.[2]
  2. "Photo of William Gowland," gallery label, British Museum.[3]; "William Gowland, amateur archaeologist," gallery label, British Museum.[4]
  3. Gallery label, "Thomas Watters, diplomat," British Museum.[5]