INDIA LARGEST AND OLDEST MUSEUM
INDIA LARGEST AND OLDEST MUSEUM
The Indian Museumis the largest and oldest museum in India and has rare collections of antiques,
armour and ornaments, fossils, skeletons, mummies, and Mughal paintings. It was founded by
the Asiatic Society of Bengal in Kolkata (Calcutta), India, in 1814. The
founder curator was Nathaniel
Wallich, a Danish botanist.
It has
six sections comprising thirty five galleries of cultural and scientific
artifacts namely Art, Archaeology, Anthropology, Geology, Zoology and Economic
Botany. At present, it includes six cultural and scientific sections, viz. Art,
Archaeology, Anthropology, geology,
zoology and economic botany, with a number of galleries under each section.
Many rare and unique specimens, both Indian and trans -Indian, relating to
humanities and natural sciences, are preserved and displayed in the galleries
of these sections. the administrative control of the Cultural sections, viz.
Art, Archaeology and Anthropology rests with the Board of Trustees under its
Directorate, and that of the three other science sections is with the
geological survey of India, the zoological survey of India and the Botanical
survey of India. The museum Directorate has eight co-ordinating service units:
Education, Preservation, publication, presentation, photography, medical,
modelling and library. This multipurpose Institution with multidisciplinary
activities is being included as an Institute
of national importance in the
seventh schedule of the Constitution
of India It is one of oldest
museums in the world. This is an autonomous organization under Ministry of Culture, Government of
India. The present Director of the Indian Museum is B. Venugopal. The
museum was closed to visitors due to massive restoration and upgrades from 1
September 2013 to 3 February 2014
The Indian Museum originated from the Asiatic Society of Bengal which was created by Sir William Jones in 1784. The concept of having a museum arose
in 1796 from members of the Asiatic Society as a place where man-made and
natural objects could be collected, cared for and displayed. The objective
began to look achievable in 1808 when the Society was offered suitable
accommodation by the Government of India in the Chowringhee-Park Street area.
In February 2, 1814, Nathaniel Wallich, a Danish botanist, who had been
captured in the siege of Serampore but later released, wrote a letter
supporting the formation of a museum in Calcutta which he said should have two
sections - an archaeological, ethnological and technical section and a
geological and zoological one The Museum
was created, with Wallich named the Honorary Curator and then Superintendent of
the Oriental Museum of the Asiatic Society.
Wallich also donated a number of botanical specimens to the museum from his
personal collection
After the resignation of Wallich, curators were paid salaries
ranging from Rs 50 to Rs 200 a month. Until 1836 this salary was paid by the Asiatic Society but in that year its bankers, Palmer and
Company became insolvent and the Government began to pay from its public funds.
A temporary grant of Rs 200 per month was sanctioned for maintenance of the
museum and library, and J. T. Pearson of the Bengal Medical Service was
appointed curator followed shortly by John Mc Clelland and after his resignation by Edward Blyth. In 1840, the Government took a keen interest in the Geology and mineral resources and this led to an additional grant of Rs
250 per month for the geological section alone. A new building became a need
and this was designed by Walter R Granville and completed in 1875 for the cost of Rs 1,40,000 In 1879 it received a portion of the
collection from the India Museum (South Kensington) when that collection was dispersed
The Zoological and Anthropological sections of the museum gave
rise to the Zoological Survey of India in 1916, which in turn gave rise to the Anthropological Survey
of India in 1945
It
currently (2009) occupies a resplendent mansion, and exhibits among others: an Egyptian mummy, The organs are taken out of the mummy's body
through nostrils, except heart. The heart is placed in special chambers. The
body was then massaged with salt and oil. The covering was done by thin cotton
cloth the Buddhist Stupa
from Bharhut the Buddha's ashes, the Ashoka pillar, whose four-lion symbol became the official emblem of
the Republic
of India, fossil skeletons Of Prenhistoric animals, an art collection, rare antiques, and a collection
of meteorites. The Indian Museum is also regarded as "the beginning of a
significant epoch initiating the socio-cultural and scientific achievements of
the country. It is otherwise considered as the beginning of the modernity and
the end of mediaeval era" by UZER
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