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While buying Mona
Lisa erasers at the museum gift shop, did you stop and marvel that the
citizens of the world have access to the U.S. Constitution, T. rex
skeletons and the Rosetta Stone? It wasn't always so.
The conception of the museum has changed radically over the
last several centuries. During the Renaissance, a passion erupted among
well-to-do Italians for amassing collections of classical and ancient art and
artifacts. European royal families demonstrated their wealth with cabinets of
the exotic, the beautiful and the curious, and they showed their generosity by
occasionally opening these collections to the public. The scientific revolution
of the 17th century saw museums become havens for research in the
natural sciences.
In 1683, a private collection of natural history curiosities
was donated to the University of Oxford, where the collection was opened to the
public. The Ashmolean Museum thus became the first permanent public exhibition
housed by a corporation. In the next century, the opening of the British Museum and the Louvre heralded the dawn of a new age of government-supported public
education and gift-shop trinkets.
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