National Maritime Museum
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| National Maritime Museum | |
|---|---|
| Established | 1937 |
| Location | Grenwich, London SE10, England Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg |
| Collection size | 2 million + objects |
| Museum area | 200 acres |
| Visitor figures | 1,557,249 (2006) |
| Director | Kevin Fewster, AM, FRSA |
| Nearest tube station(s) | North Greenwich, Greenwich station, Cutty Sark (DLR) |
| Website | NMM Official Website |
The National Maritime Museum (NMM) in Greenwich, England is the leading maritime museum of the United Kingdom.
Contents |
[edit] Creation and official opening
The Museum was created by the National Maritime Act of 1934 Chapter 43 [1], under a Board of Trustees, appointed by H.M. Treasury. It is based on the generous donations of Sir James Caird (1864–1954). King George VI formally opened the Museum in April 27, 1937 when his daughter Princess Elizabeth, later Queen Elizabeth II accompanied him for the journey along the Thames from London. The first Director was Sir Geoffrey Callender[2].
[edit] Collection
Since earliest times Greenwich has had associations with the sea and navigation. It was a landing place for the Romans; Henry VIII lived here; the navy has roots on the waterfront; and Charles II founded the Royal Observatory in 1675 for ‘finding the longitude of places’. The home of Greenwich Mean Time and the Prime Meridian since 1884, Greenwich has long been a centre for astronomical study, while navigators across the world have set their clocks according to its time of day.
The Museum has the most important holdings in the world on the history of Britain at sea comprising more than two million items, including maritime art (both British and 17th-century Dutch), cartography, manuscripts including official public records, ship models and plans, scientific and navigational instruments, instruments for time-keeping and astronomy (based at the Observatory). Its British portraits collection is exceeded in size only by that of the National Portrait Gallery and its holdings relating to Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson and Captain James Cook, among many other individuals, are unrivalled.
It has the world's largest maritime historical reference library (100,000 volumes) including books dating back to the 15th century. An active loans programme ensures that items from the collection are seen in the UK and abroad. Through its displays, exhibitions and outreach programmes the Museum also explores our current relationship with the sea and the future of the sea as an environmental force and resource.
By virtue of its pairing with the Royal Observatory, the Museum enjoys a unique conjunction of subjects (history, science and the arts), enabling it to trace the movement and accomplishments of people and the origins and consequences of empire. The outcome of the Museum's work is to achieve, for all its users at home and overseas, a greater understanding of British economic, cultural, social, political and maritime history and its consequences in the world today.
The collection of the National Maritime Museum also includes items taken from Germany after World War II, including several ship models and paintings. The museum has been criticized for possessing what has been described as "Looted art".[3] The Museum regards these cultural objects as "war trophies", removed under the provisions of the Potsdam Conference.
The Museum awards an annual medal in honour of its major donor, Sir James Caird.
[edit] The site
The museum was officially established in 1934 within the 200 acres of Greenwich Royal Park in the buildings of what was the former Royal Hospital School (or Royal Naval School). It includes the Queen's House (part of the historic park-and-palace landscape of "Maritime Greenwich", which was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997) and the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, until 1948 the home of the Royal Greenwich Observatory.
The gardens immediately to the north of the museum were reinstated in the late 1870s following construction of the cut-and-cover tunnel between Greenwich and Maze Hill stations. The tunnel comprised part of the final section of the London and Greenwich Railway and opened in 1878.
Flamsteed House (1675-76), the original part of the Royal Observatory, was designed by Sir Christopher Wren and was the first purpose-built scientific research facility in Britain. In 1953, the Old Royal Observatory became part of the Museum. Flamsteed House, was first opened for visitors by Queen Elizabeth II in 1960.
The 17th-century Queen’s House, an early classical building designed by Inigo Jones, is the keystone of the historic ‘park and place’ landscape of maritime Greenwich.
All the Museum buildings have been subsequently upgraded. A full redevelopment of the main galleries, centring on what is now the Neptune Court, and funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, was completed in 1999. The Queen's House was refurbished in 2001 to become the heart of displays of art from the Museum's collection.
In May 2007 a major capital project Time and Space, opened up the entire Royal Observatory site for the benefit of visitors. The £16 million transformation features three new modern astronomy galleries, four new time galleries, facilities for collections conservation and research, a learning centre and a 120-seat planetarium designed to give a magnificent introduction to the world beyond the night sky.
[edit] Other British maritime museums
The National Maritime Museum Cornwall is a fully independent museum, a development of the original FIMI (Falmouth International Maritime Initiative) partnership created in 1992 and the result of collaboration between the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich and the former Cornwall Maritime Museum in Falmouth.
[edit] See also
- List of London museums
- Greenwich Visitor Centre
- Nederlands Scheepvaart Museum (Netherlands Maritime Museum)
- National Waterways Museum — UK's national museum of inland waterway transport
- National Maritime Museums (list of similarly named museums)
[edit] Gallery of images
Propeller, National Maritime Museum.jpg
A propellor at the National Maritime Museum |
[edit] References
- ^ National Maritime Museum, Governing Acts of Parliament.
- ^ ODNB article by Michael Lewis, ‘Callender, Sir Geoffrey Arthur Romaine (1875–1946)’, rev. H. C. G. Matthew, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [1] accessed 23 Sept 2007.
- ^ Martin Bailey three articles: (1) "Revealed: Nazi painting in London’s Maritime Museum looted by British." The Art Newspaper. January 3, 2007, (2) How the London Maritime Museum rebuffed a German claim in 1965. The Art Newspaper. February 1, 2007, (3) "Revealed: six paintings in Maritime Museum were seized by British troops from Nazi Germany." The Art Newspaper. February 1, 2007
[edit] External links
cs:National Maritime Museum de:National Maritime Museum fr:National Maritime Museum he:המוזיאון הימי הלאומי (גריניץ') sk:National Maritime Museum
Categories: Maritime museums in the United Kingdom | Archives in England | Buildings and structures in Greenwich | Museums in London | Military museums in England | Museums sponsored by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport | Transport museums in England | World War I museums | Water transport in the United Kingdom | History of museums | Maritime history | Marine art museums

