Leverian collection

Leverian Museum
Interior view of Sir Ashton Lever's Museum, Leicester Square, London, 30 March 1785
Leverian collection is located in Central London
Leverian collection
Location within Central London
Established1775 (1775)
LocationLeicester Square, London
Coordinates51°30′37″N 0°07′49″W / 51.510278°N 0.130278°W / 51.510278; -0.130278
Collection sizec. 28,000 objects
DirectorSir Ashton Lever
WebsiteA collection of drawings by Sarah Stone

The Leverian collection was a natural history and ethnographic collection assembled by Ashton Lever. It was noted for the content it acquired from the voyages of Captain James Cook. For three decades it was displayed in London, being broken up by auction in 1806.[1] The first public location of the collection was the Holophusikon, also known as the Leverian Museum, at Leicester House, on Leicester Square, from 1775 to 1786. After it passed from Lever's ownership, it was displayed for nearly twenty years more at the purpose-built Blackfriars Rotunda just across the Thames, sometimes called Parkinson's Museum for its subsequent owner, James Parkinson (c. 1730-1813).

  1. ^ Kaeppler, Adrienne L.(2011). Holophusicon: The Leverian Museum – An Eighteenth-Century English Institution of Science, Curiosity, and Art. Altenstadt, ZKF Publishers.