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Museum of London
Museum dedicated to recording and representing the history of the London region
from prehistoric times to the present day. Situated at the junction of London Wall
and Aldersgate Street in the Barbican district of the City of London, the present
building, designed by Philip Powell and Hidalgo Moya, was opened in 1976. It is the
largest urban-history museum in the world.
Created by act of Parliament in 1965, the Museum of London brought together the
collections of two well-established museums, the Guildhall Museum and the London
Museum. The former, founded by the Corporation of London in 1826, housed many
archaeological discoveries of the previous two centuries from Roman and medieval
London, the Hanbury Beaufoy collection of tradesmen's tokens, and material relating
to the city guilds and livery companies.
The London Museum, opened in 1912, had
been conceived partly as a memorial to Edward VII, and as a result it attracted
royal collections. Other acquisitions included the John G. Joicey collection of
Chelsea and Bow porcelain and decorative arts, Sir Richard Tangye's English Civil
Wars collection, and more than 400 pieces of English glass amassed by Sir Richard
Garton.
The museum's displays have been conceived as a "biography" of London and have a
strong social-history element. Arranged chronologically, the glimpses of London
life include reconstructed furnished rooms from Roman Londinium, as well as marble
sculptures from the Temple of Mithras; fine medieval pottery and metalwork; Tudor
and Stuart arms, armour, and costumes; theatre memorabilia; a cell from Newgate
Prison; shop interiors of various London trades; and a hansom cab. Among the many
popular exhibits are a diorama of the Great Fire of London in 1666 and the lord
mayor's state coach, dating to 1757.
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