British Museum

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Travel Jane Porter
She was still there in early May 1842, when Robert suffered a stroke and died, the day before they were to leave for home.
Pope-Hennessy, Una. Agnes Strickland: Biographer of the Queens of England. Chatto and Windus.
112-13
Todd, Janet, editor. Dictionary of British Women Writers. Routledge.
It took her nearly two years to settle his estate...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Harriett Mozley
Her letters, on the evidence of those included in Dorothea Mozley 's Newman Family Letters (published by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge in 1962), are highly intelligent and entertaining. As a girl she rattles...
Textual Production Barbarina Brand, Baroness Dacre
BBBD was a conscientious and entertaining letter-writer with a large circle of correspondents. The Plymouth and West Devon Record Office holds a collection of her correspondence from the 1840s with Frances Parker, Countess of Morley
Textual Production Edith Somerville
The full title was An Incorruptible Irishman, Being an account of Chief Justice Charles Kendal Bushe , and of his wife, Nancy Crampton, and their times, 1767-1843. ES set out in November 1930 to...
Textual Production Anne Damer
AD 's activity as a sculptor dates mostly from after 1777. Her best-known works include the keystones of the bridge at Henley, carved to represent the rivers Thames and Isis: completed in 1785, they...
Textual Production L. T. Meade
LTM published a volume of oriental short stories entitled Under the Dragon Throne in collaboration with Sir Robert Kennaway Douglas , Keeper of Oriental Printed Books and Manuscripts at the British Museum .
Solo: Search Oxford University Libraries Online. http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?vid=OXVU1&fromLogin=true&reset_config=true.
Textual Production Elizabeth von Arnim
She requested that after she died, everything that might threaten the eyes and reason of the biographer be destroyed.
Usborne, Karen. "Elizabeth": The Author of Elizabeth and Her German Garden. Bodley Head.
313
Liebet , the daughter she chose as executor of her will, complied with this in...
Textual Production Noel Streatfeild
NS 's other writing for children included plays (a collected volume, The Children's Matinee, 1934) and a remarkable life of The Boy Pharaoh, Tutankhamen for young readers, published in 1972 to coincide with the...
Textual Production Dorothy Osborne
After the two were married, he kept the letters in his cabinet. They descended in the family until sold to the British Museum in 1891 (except a few which have been lost). Only a few...
Textual Production Penelope Fitzgerald
The month of PF 's family biography also saw her first novel, The Golden Child, a detective story centred on the British Museum during the hugely popular Tutankhamun Exhibition which opened on 29 March...
Textual Production Marina Warner
MW has addressed the current shift in the aims and conditions of British universities, first in a Diary column for the London Review of Books in September 2014 (in which she tells the story of...
Textual Production Augusta Gregory
In preparing the book, AG consulted nineteenth-century editions of Middle Irish texts at the British Museum , the National Library in Dublin , and the Royal Irish Academy . From these, she aimed to produce...
Textual Features Elizabeth Pipe Wolferstan
The stories begin with Jack and the Beanstalk and include Bluebeard and Cinderella. EPW is not over-respectful of her sources. In her Jack and the Beanstalk Mrs Jones (the giant's wife) donates her late...
Textual Features John Oliver Hobbes
In Some Emotions and a Moral characters are beset by unhappy loves and ill-advised marriages. Cynthia rejects the writer Godfrey Provence because he is an artist, and marries instead the more manageable Edward, who dies...
Textual Features Barbara Hofland
BH explains that she intends to vindicate the character of Richard III (who in her view came back as Perkin Warbeck ) and expose Henry VII as a villain. She used the British Museum again...

Timeline

11 May 868: The earliest printed book extant which bears...

Writing climate item

11 May 868

The earliest printed book extant which bears a date, a classic Buddhist text entitled The Diamond Sutra, was printed in China on this day, as a tribute to both his parents from a man...

1705: The German-born entomologist Maria Sibilla...

Writing climate item

1705

The German-born entomologist Maria Sibilla Merian (1647-1717) published at Amsterdam her handsome folio titled in Latin Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamensium and illustrated by herself.
Her second name is variously spelled. The British Library Catalogue records Sibylla...

5 April 1753: The British Parliament paid the daughters...

National or international item

5 April 1753

The British Parliament paid the daughters of the late Sir Hans Sloane £20,000 for his scientific collections. This transaction was previously laid out by Sloane's will from 20 July 1749.

15 January 1759: The first reading room of the British Museum...

National or international item

15 January 1759

The first reading room of the British Museum was opened.

15 January 1759: The British Museum (including what had formerly...

Building item

15 January 1759

The British Museum (including what had formerly been known as the King's Library ), established six years earlier, was first opened to the public.

23 August 1799: Napoleon left his command in Egypt and headed...

National or international item

23 August 1799

Napoleon left his command in Egypt and headed for Paris, leaving behind him most of the huge haul of the country's artefacts which had already been packed for shipping to France.

1801: Thomas Bruce, Seventh Earl of Elgin, received...

Building item

1801

Thomas Bruce , Seventh Earl of Elgin, received permission to draw and make casts from statues at the Parthenon in Athens.

1802: The Rosetta stone, whose three-fold inscription...

Building item

1802

The Rosetta stone, whose three-fold inscription offered the opportunity of learning to decode ancient Egyptian, was presented to the British Museum after being captured in the Egyptian campaign the previous year.

15 February 1816: Lord Elgin petitioned the House of Commons:...

National or international item

15 February 1816

Lord Elgin petitioned the House of Commons : he wanted to compel the British Museum to buy his collection of ancient Greek artefacts, the Elgin Marbles (especially the famous frieze from the Parthenon in Athens).

1818: A Select Committee of the House of Commons...

Writing climate item

1818

A Select Committee of the House of Commons recommended that the eleven free copies of books which publishers were currently obliged to provide for the Copyright Libraries be limited to a single copy for the...

1825: Alexander Dyce, then a twenty-seven-year-old...

Women writers item

1825

Alexander Dyce , then a twenty-seven-year-old reluctant clergyman, published his Specimens of British Poetesses, a project in rediscovering women's literary history.

1856: Richard Owen, a rival of Darwin and Huxley,...

Building item

1856

Richard Owen , a rival of Darwin and Huxley , was appointed superintendent of the natural history departments of the British Museum .

2 May 1857: A grand dome designed by Panizzi was opened...

Building item

2 May 1857

A grand dome designed by Panizzi was opened in what had been the central courtyard of the British Museum .

1865: The Elgin Marbles were repaired and rearranged...

Building item

1865

The Elgin Marbles were repaired and rearranged at the British Museum.

1869: The British Museum opened its mineral collection...

National or international item

1869

The British Museum opened its mineral collection to the public.

Texts

Hayden, Ruth. Mrs. Delany: Her Life and Her Flowers. British Museum, 1986.