Title: Museums and Their Functions: Lecture 02
1Museums and Their Functions Lecture 02
- Brief History of Natural History Museums (Part I)
2Introduction.
- One role of museums assembling objects and
maintaining them within a specific intellectual
environment (world view). This statement is
pertinent in tracing the history of museums
because world views change over time.
A world view is an implicit (rational) manner by
which a society perceives its surroundings and
functions within its surroundings.
Museum development is divided into six phases
corresponding to shifts in world view.
3Historical Periods
- Six periods of natural history museum development
according to Whitehead (1990). - Greco-Roman Period (to 400 A.D.).
- Pre-Renaissance Period (400-1400).
- Renaissance Period (1400-1600).
- Pre-Linnaean Period (1600-1750).
- Linnaean Period (1750-1850).
- Modern Period (1850-present).
4World View Periods
- According to Hooper-Greenhill (1992) there were
three distinct periods of museum development
- Renaissance Episteme 1400-1600.
- Classical Episteme 1600-1750 Pre-Linnaean
Period.
- Modern Episteme 1750-present Linnaean Modern
periods.
Episteme is a world view.
5Greco-Roman Period (to 400 A.D.)
- 290 BC Ptolemy II Philadelphus established center
of learning dedicated to the muses (poetry,
history, music, drama, dance, and astronomy) in
Alexandria.
- Museum personnel included director, scholars,
students, all supported by the state.
- First establishment for promotion of literature
and science. Research and teaching were primary
goals.
- Library and museum were destroyed during civil
unrest between 270 and 275 AD.
6Pre-Renaissance Period (400-1400)
- In the Thirteenth Century there was a revival of
learning with translation of Greek writing into
Latin.
- Period with veneration for rare, unusual,
wonderful, and miraculous.
- Knowledge based on previous knowledge rather than
observations.
- There was no a real concept of temporal change.
Past was seen in terms of the present.
7Renaissance Period (1400-1600)
- Medici palace, first museum of Europe.
- World view concerned with life in the present
rather than contemplative ideal of earlier times.
- Secular values (power and influence) developed a
new cultural field.
- Classical past was revered, classical artifacts
and reproductions displayed, importance of
temporal change realized.
- Knowledge consisted of discovering hidden
similarities through correspondences (legends,
hearsay and material offered clues to discovering
likeness and relationships).
8Palazzo Medici, Florence c. 1440 (first European
museum).
Palazzo Medici, Florence c. 1440 (first European
museum). It contained treasures of precious
metals and stones, and classical artifacts and
reproduction of classical artifacts (sculpture,
manuscripts, and coins). (From Hooper-Greenhill,
1992).
9Renaissance Period (1400-1600)
- By end of 16th century private museums common in
Europe. First were cabinets of curiosity later as
cabinets of the world.
- Cabinets of the world (Kunstkammers) attempted to
create models of nature.
- Cabinets included objects of magical powers,
fossils, precious stones, classical artifacts and
reproductions. (Little discrimination between
original and reproductions.)
- Ordering and relationships of objects provided
the message but message may be partially hidden.
10Kunstkammer of Frans Franken the Younger (early
17th century).
Kunstkammer of Frans Franken the Younger (early
17th century). Paintings, figurines, shells,
dried fishes, and other natural and human
productions were brought together to represent
the world. (From Hooper-Greenhill, 1992).
11Antiquarium of Wittelsbach, Munich, 1568.
Antiquarium of Wittelsbach, Munich, 1568.
Sculpture arranged in scheme of allegory and
symbol. Typical of displays to support social
status. (From Hooper-Greenhill, 1992).
12Renaissance Period (1400-1600)
- Cabinets used interpretation, esoteric knowledge,
memory techniques (places and images) to provide
two or three dimensional models of the world.
- In part contents of cabinets determined by
medicinal value and men trained in medicine
studied zoology and botany.
- Early naturalists Pierre Belon (1517-64),
Guillaume Rondelet (1507-66), Hippolyto Salviani
(1514-72), Conrad Gesner ((1516-65), and Ulyssis
Aldrovandi (1522-1605).
Memory techniques are a form of language
constructed of images and spaces to express ideas.
13Renaissance Period (1400-1600)
- Conrad Gesners Histoia animalium. 4 vols.
1551-1558.
- Included synonymy of each species, geographical
variation, life history, fables, folklore,
adages, proverbs, and emblems.
- The fables, folklore, adages, and proverbs
summarize what the animal symbolize in human
culture.
- Emblems consist of an image, preferably obscure
motto, and an explanatory epigrammatic poem.
- Purpose of an emblem was to convey a clever
truth, and emblems were very popular during the
16th century.
14Woodcut of a fox.
A
B
A. Woodcut of a fox. From Gesners Historia
Animalium (1551). B. Woodcut of fox emblem. From
Alciatis Emblematum libellus (1534).
Translation What a fine head this is but it has
no brain. From Ashworth 1996.
15Emblem of a fox and badger.
Emblem of a fox and badger. From Camerarius
(1595). Translation What you want another has.
From Ashworth 1996.
16Renaissance Period (1400-1600)
- Aldrovandi published a 13 volume encyclopedia of
natural history.
- Had fine illustrations, including anatomical
drawings.
- Descriptions were based to a large extent on
observations.
- Fables, epithets, proverbs, allegories, emblems,
and symbolic images were also included.
Epithets are adjectives, nouns, or phrases used
to characterize a person or thing.
17Aldrovandi. Dragon of 1572.
Aldrovandi. Dragon of 1572.
18Pre-Linnaean Period (1600-1750)
- Age of Discovery (early 15th and 16th centuries)
brought end to Renaissance episteme.
- Discrimination rather than similitude became
basis for knowledge.
- World became known by objective analysis rather
than by subjective experience.
- 17th century proliferation of collections,
botanical gardens, and menageries.
19Pre-Linnaean Period (1600-1750)
- Museums develop from mere catalogs of nature to
natural classifications, and museums tended to be
specialized.
- There was a great mobility of museums and museums
were used for teaching.
- John Ray (1629-1705) and Francis Willoughby
(1635-1672) were the first modern naturalists to
develop natural catalogs.
20Museum of Francesco Calzolari (Verona, 1622).
Museum of Francesco Calzolari (Verona, 1622).
21Museum of Olaus Worm, Leiden, 1655
(Museum of Olaus Worm, Leiden, 1655). From
Whitaker 1996.
22Museum of Ferrante Imperato
Museum of Ferrante Imperato (Venice, 1672).
23Museum of Ferdinando Cespi, (Bologna, 1677).
Museum of Ferdinando Cespi, (Bologna, 1677).
Cespi stressed the sensational.
24Roman College Museum
Roman College Museum, (Rome 1678). Under
Athanasius Kircher (1602-1680) study of languages
was joined with the study of natural history.
25References and Credits
Ashworth,W.B., Jr. 1996. Emblematic natural
history of the Renaissance. pp. 17-37. In
Cultures of Natural History (eds.) N. Jardine,
J.A. Secord, and E/C/ Spary. Cambridge Univ.
Press, New York.
Hooper-Greenhill, E. 1992. Museums and the
shaping of knowledge. Routledge, New York.
Whitehead, P.J.P. 1970. Museums in the history of
zoology. Mus. J.
Whitaker, K. 1996. The culture of curiosity. pp.
75-90. In Cultures of Natural History (eds.) N.
Jardine, J.A. Secord, and E/C/ Spary. Cambridge
Univ. Press, New York.