The precursors of museums
Evidence from antiquity
The origins of the twin concepts of preservation and interpretation, which form the basis of the museum, lie in the human propensity to acquire and inquire. Collections of objects have been found in Paleolithic burials, while evidence of inquiry into the environment, and communication of the findings, can be seen in the cave and mobiliary art of the same period. A development toward the idea of the museum certainly occurred early in the 2nd millennium bce at Larsa, in Mesopotamia, where copies of old inscriptions were made for use in the schools. But the idea also involves the interpretation of original material—criteria that seem to have been met by objects discovered by Sir Leonard Woolley in the 6th-century-bce levels of the Babylonian city of Ur. Woolley’s findings indicated that the Babylonian kings Nebuchadrezzar and Nabonidus certainly collected antiquities in their day. In addition, in a room next to the unearthed temple school there was found not only a collection of antiquities but also a tablet describing 21st-century-bce inscriptions. Woolley interpreted the tablet as a museum label. This discovery seems to suggest that Ennigaldi-Nanna, Nabonidus’s daughter and a priestess who ran the school, had a small educational museum there.
Classical collecting
The archaeological and historical records do not provide evidence that the museum as it is known today developed in such early times, nor does the word museum support this, despite its classical origin. Nevertheless, the collection of things that might have religious, magical, economic, aesthetic, or historical value or that simply might be curiosities was undertaken worldwide by groups as well as by individuals. In the Greek and Roman empires the votive offerings housed in temples, sometimes in specially built treasuries, are but one example: they included works of art and natural curiosities, as well as exotic items brought from far-flung parts of the empires, and they were normally open to the public, often upon payment of a small fee. Closer to the concept of a museum was the Greek pinakotheke, such as that established in the 5th century bce on the Acropolis at Athens, which housed paintings honouring the gods. Nor was there a lack of public interest in art at Rome. Indeed, art abounded in the public places of Rome, but there was no museum. The inaccessibility of the collection of more than one Roman emperor was the subject of public comment, and Agrippa, a deputy of Augustus, commented in the 1st century bce to the effect that paintings and statues should be available to the people.
Asia and Africa
In Asia veneration of the past and of its personalities also led to the collection of objects. Collecting commenced at least as early as the Shang dynasty, which ruled China from approximately the mid-16th to the mid-11th century bce, and it was well developed by the Qin dynasty (3rd century bce)—as attested by the tomb of the Qin emperor Shihuangdi, near Xi’an (Sian), which was guarded by an army of terra-cotta warriors and horses. Together with other grave goods, these objects are preserved on-site in the Museum of Qin Figures. The palace of Shihuangdi is recorded as having many rare and valuable objects.
Successive Chinese emperors continued to promote the arts, manifest in fine works of painting, calligraphy, metalwork, jade, glass, and pottery. For example, the Han emperor Wudi (reigned 141/140–87/86 bce) established an academy that contained paintings and calligraphies from each of the Chinese provinces, and the last Han emperor, Xiandi (abdicated 220 ce), established a gallery containing portraits of his ministers.
In Japan the Tōdai Temple, housing a colossal seated bronze statue of the Great Buddha (Daibutsu), was built in the 8th century at Nara. The temple’s treasures still can be seen in the Shōsō-in repository there.
At about the same time, Islamic communities were making collections of relics at the tombs of early Muslim martyrs. The idea of waqf, formalized by Muhammad himself, whereby property was given for the public good and for religious purposes, also resulted in the formation of collections. In tropical Africa the collection of objects also has a long history, as instanced in wayside shrines and certain religious ceremonies. Similar collections were made in many other parts of the world.
Medieval Europe
In medieval Europe collections were mainly the prerogative of princely houses and the church. Indeed, there was often a close link between the two, as in the case of the fine treasures of the emperor Charlemagne, which were divided among a number of religious houses early in the 9th century. Such treasures had economic importance and were used to finance wars and other state expenses. Other collections took the form of alleged relics of Christendom, in which there was a considerable trade. At this time Europe’s maritime links with the rest of the world were largely through the northern Mediterranean ports of Lombardy and Tuscany, which, together with the ecclesiastical significance of Rome, brought considerable contact between the Italian peninsula and the Continent. There is evidence of the movement of antiquities, and of a developing trade in them, from the 12th century. Henry of Blois, bishop of Winchester, is reported to have bought ancient statues during a visit to Rome in 1151 and to have dispatched them to England, a journey of about one month’s duration.
The movement of antiquities was not confined to those of Italy. Exotic material from other areas entering Italian ports soon found its way into royal collections, while the Venetian involvement in the Fourth Crusade early in the 13th century resulted in the transfer of the famous bronze horses from Constantinople (now Istanbul) to the San Marco Basilica in Venice.