British Museum: Difference between revisions

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== Exhibits ==
== Exhibits ==
By [[1921]], the [[Elgin Marbles]] were present in the museum, ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[A Life in the Day (audio story)|A Life in the Day]]'') and in [[1926]], a [[crystal]] [[skull]] carved by pre-[[Christopher Columbus|Colombian]] [[Mesoamerican]]s was present, as noted by [[Narayan]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Emerald Tiger (audio story)|The Emerald Tiger]]'')
By [[1921]], the [[Elgin Marbles]] were present in the museum, ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[A Life in the Day (audio story)|A Life in the Day]]'') and in [[1926]], a [[crystal]] [[skull]] carved by pre-[[Christopher Columbus|Colombian]] [[Mesoamerican]]s was present, as noted by [[Narayan]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Emerald Tiger (audio story)|The Emerald Tiger]]'')
By [[2007]], the [[Rosetta Stone]] was on display in the Egyptian gallery of the museum. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Stone Rose (novel)|The Stone Rose]]'')


== History ==
== History ==

Revision as of 07:26, 29 December 2020

British Museum

The British Museum was a major museum devoted to human history and culture, located on Great Russell Street (PROSE: Attack of the Cybermen) in Bloomsbury, London. (PROSE: The Winning Side)

Exhibits

By 1921, the Elgin Marbles were present in the museum, (AUDIO: A Life in the Day) and in 1926, a crystal skull carved by pre-Colombian Mesoamericans was present, as noted by Narayan. (AUDIO: The Emerald Tiger)

By 2007, the Rosetta Stone was on display in the Egyptian gallery of the museum. (PROSE: The Stone Rose)

History

For most of the late 17th and early 18th centuries, the last known stuffed dodo was kept in the British Museum by the Royal Society. (COMIC: Bêtes Noires & Dark Horses)

In 1868, the Fifth Doctor and Nyssa first met Beatrice Mapp in a tea shop near the British Museum. (AUDIO: The Boy That Time Forgot)

The Doctor once lent his reader's ticket for the British Museum to Karl Marx. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Apocalypse)

In the 1890s, the Sixth Doctor, Leela, George Litefoot, and Henry Gordon Jago visited the museum's reading room, where silence was expected. (AUDIO: The Hourglass Killers)

In autumn 1894, Professor Jolyon Tanner was the director of Egyptology at the British Museum. He called Madame Vastra, Jenny Flint, and Strax to the museum to help him discover what was causing depression in anyone who read an artefact he called a sequel to the Book of the Dead. (PROSE: The Curious Case of the Misery Diary)

In 1921, Liv Chenka and Martin Donaldson visited the museum. (AUDIO: A Life in the Day)

Polly Wright went on school trips to the British Museum. (PROSE: The Underwater Menace)

In November 1973, Barbara Chesterton took her son John to the museum to look at the Roman exhibit. (PROSE: Byzantium!)

In 1984, Victoria Waterfield was employed at the museum. (PROSE: Downtime)

In 1986, the Fifth Doctor, Nyssa and Tegan Jovanka visited the British Museum. Whilst there, they encountered Egyptian religious fanatics, who kidnapped Nyssa. (PROSE: The Sands of Time)

Around the year 2000, the British Museum had the largest collection of Greek marble in the world, more than was kept in Athens itself. (AUDIO: The Spectre of Lanyon Moor)

In 2007, a statue of Rose Tyler (dressed as the goddess Fortuna) and the foot of the Ogre of Hyfor Three were on display in the museum. (PROSE: The Stone Rose)

In 2099, Del McAllen worked at the museum. (PROSE: Snowglobe 7)

In preparation for her expedition to the Library with the Felman Lux Corporation in the 51st century, River Song intended to visit the British Museum 4.0, as recorded in her diary. (GAME: The Eternity Clock)

Alternate timelines

In an alternate timeline in which Nazi Germany won World War II, the British Museum was renamed the Reichsmuseum by the occupying forces. Most works of art and artefacts displayed there were taken by Hermann Goering to New Berlin, and the building was used to house the military archives. The Seventh Doctor, while posing as the Reichsinspektor General, visited the museum to consult the archives and find out when the timeline had changed. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Exodus)

In an alternate timeline in the year 5000, the few remaining normal humans lived in what remained of the British Museum. (COMIC: A Stitch in Time)