On television
Lisa Jardine celebrated the 250th anniversary of the British Museum by taking a look back at the institution's history. Find out about the programme.
Museum pieces
Founded in 1753, the history of the British Museum is one of continuous expansion and striving for space. As fascinating as their contents, explore museum history.
Related programme
The British Museum celebrated its 250th anniversary on 7th June, 2003. Founded by an Act of Parliament, the British Museum was the first national public museum in the world – the first to belong to a nation rather than a monarch or private patron, established for the nation’s benefit, its collection available to every citizen, to all ‘studious and curious’ people regardless of rank or status, free of charge.
From the very beginning, the British Museum has seen itself as a world museum, at first in the sense that its collection was drawn from across the world; more recently in the sense that it is for the world, reflecting a global heritage to its increasing numbers of visitors from Asia, Africa, Australasia and the Americas as well as from Britain itself. More than five million people visit it every year, making it, together with the Louvre, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the State Hermitage in St Petersburg, one of the world’s most popular museums.
The ideals of its founders are as crucial to our future today as they were in 1753, in a world where competing nationalisms and cultures still obscure our common humanity. The British Museum’s role is to display the world’s great civilisations and cultures, and through their display to tell the story of human achievement, across the world and through its ages. Its treasures and everyday artefacts allow us to glimpse and understand the lives of the people who made them. The museum exists to give understanding and meaning to our life past and present.
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Content last updated: 25/07/2005








