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National Roman Legion Museum / Amgueddfa Lleng Rufeinig Cymru

Wikidata identifier:
Q6978140
Also known as:
Amgueddfa Lleng Rufeinig Cymru, National Roman Legion Museum
Instance of:
military museum; national museum; museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1698
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q6978140/
Collection level records:
Yes, see Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales

National Science and Media Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q3054692
Also known as:
National Media Museum
Instance of:
national museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1676
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q3054692/
Collection level records:
Yes, see Science Museum Group

National Slate Museum / Amgueddfa Lechi Cymru

Wikidata identifier:
Q1967708
Also known as:
Dinorwic Slate Quarry Workshops (Welsh Slate Museum Buildings), Welsh Slate Museum, Amgueddfa Lechi Cymru, National Slate Museum
Instance of:
national museum; industry museum; mining museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1703
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q1967708/
Collection level records:
Yes, see Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales

National Tramway Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q840246
Also known as:
Crich Tramway Village
Instance of:
tramway museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum; Designated collection
Accreditation number:
508
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q840246/
Object records:
Yes, see object records for this museum
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

National Trust

Wikidata identifier:
Q333515
Responsible for:
2 Willow Road; A La Ronde; Alexander Keiller Museum; Anglesey Abbey, Gardens and Lode Mill; Ardress House; Argory; Arlington Court; Attingham Park; Baddesley Clinton Hall; Basildon Park; Batemanʼs; Beatrix Potter Gallery; Belton House; Beningbrough Hall; Benthall Hall; Berrington Hall; Birmingham Back to Backs; Blickling Hall; Brockhampton Estate; Buckland Abbey; Calke Abbey; Canons Ashby House; Carlyle’s House; Castle Drogo; Castle Ward; Charlecote Park; Chartwell; Chastleton House; Chedworth Roman Villa; Cherryburn Thomas Bewickʼs Birthplace; Chirk Castle; Clevedon Court; Clouds Hill; Coleton Fishacre; Corfe Castle Museum; Cotehele House; Cragside; Croft Castle; Dinefwr Castle Museum; Dudmaston Hall; Dunham Massey Hall; Dunster Castle; Dyrham Park; East Riddlesden Hall; Erddig; Felbrigg Hall; Fenton House; Florence Court; Fox Talbot Museum; Great Chalfield Manor; Greenway House; Greyfriars House and Garden; Greys Court; Ham House; Hanbury Hall & Gardens; Hardmansʼ House; Hardwick Hall; Hatchlands Park; Hezlett House; Hill Top; Hinton Ampner; Hughenden Manor; Ickworth House; Ightham Mote; Kedleston Hall; Killerton House; Kingston Lacy House; Knightshayes Court; Knole; Lamb House; Lanhydrock House; Lindisfarne Castle; Little Moreton Hall; Llanerchaeron; Lyme Park, House and Garden; Lytes Cary Manor; Melford Hall; Mompesson House; Monkʼs House; Montacute House; Moseley Old Hall; Mottisfont Abbey; Mount Stewart; Mr Strawʼs House; National Trust Carriage Museum, Arlington Court; National Trust Museum of Childhood; Newtown Old Town Hall; Nostell Priory; Nuffield Place; Nunnington Hall; Nymans; Ormesby Hall; Osterley House; Oxburgh Hall; Packwood House; Paycockeʼs House and Gardens; Peckover House and Garden; Penrhyn Castle; Petworth House and Park; Plas Newydd (National Trust); Plas Yn Rhiw; Polesden Lacey; Powis Castle; Quarry Bank Mill and Styal Estate; Quebec House; Rievaulx Terrace; Rufford Old Hall; Saltram House; Scotney Castle; Shaw’s Corner; Sissinghurst Castle Garden; Smallhythe Place; Snowshill Manor; Souter Lighthouse; Speke Hall; Springhill House; Standen; Stourhead; Sudbury Hall; Sunnycroft; Sutton House; Tattershall Castle; Tatton Park; Tintagel Old Post Office; Townend; Treasurerʼs House, York; Tredegar House Museum; Trerice; Tudor Merchantʼs House; Tŷ Mawr Wybrnant; Tyntesfield; Uppark; Upton House and Gardens; Vyne; Wallington; Washington Old Hall; Westwood Manor; Wightwick Manor & Gardens; Wimpole Hall; Woolsthorpe Manor; Wordsworth House and Garden; Workhouse
Also known as:
National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty
Instance of:
national trust; nonprofit organization; collection
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q333515/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

National Trust Carriage Museum, Arlington Court

Wikidata identifier:
Q675650
Also known as:
National Trust Carriage Museum
Part of:
National Trust
Instance of:
historic house museum; English country house; history museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1964
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q675650-2/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

National Trust for Scotland

Wikidata identifier:
Q599997
Also known as:
The National Trust for Scotland for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty, NTS, National Trust for Scotland for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty,
Instance of:
charitable organization; national trust
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q599997/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

National Trust Museum of Childhood

Wikidata identifier:
Q113369857
Part of:
National Trust
Instance of:
museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
567
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q113369857/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

National Video Game Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q85787990
Instance of:
computer museum; independent museum
Accreditation number:
T 631
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q85787990/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

National War Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q6979345
Also known as:
National War Museum, Edinburgh, National War Museum Edinburgh, Scottish United Services Museum, Scottish Naval and Military Museum, Edinburgh Castle, National War Museum Of Scotland
Instance of:
military museum; national museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1572
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q6979345/
Collection level records:
Yes, see National Museums Scotland

National Waterfront Museum / Amgueddfa Genedlaethol y Glannau

Wikidata identifier:
Q10994022
Also known as:
Amgueddfa Genedlaethol y Glannau, National Waterfront Museum
Instance of:
maritime museum; national museum; museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
2196
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q10994022/
Collection level records:
Yes, see Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales

National Waterways Museum, Ellesmere Port

Wikidata identifier:
Q6979364
Also known as:
The Boat Museum, North West Museum of Inland Navigation
Instance of:
independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum; Designated collection
Accreditation number:
129
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q6979364/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

National Waterways Museum, Gloucester Docks

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q19873553
Also known as:
National Waterways Museum, Gloucester Docks
Instance of:
museum; national museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum; Designated collection
Accreditation number:
71
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q19873553/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    Transport Collection

    This collection largely comprises boats and barges used for transport on the waterways and for maintenance purposes. Major items are all floating, some smaller items are housed in displays or on outside exhibition. There are also engines and tools for boat driving and maintenance. There is a steam railway engine used in association with water side deliveries of coal to a power station. This is an extremely important collection of boats and equipment for transporting and handling cargo on the inland waterways of Britain.

    Subjects

    Transport; Inland waterways

    Science and Industry Collection

    The collection includes tools associated with building and driving boats; the tools used to keep waterways repaired, some of which are shown in active use such as in the blacksmith’s shop; and items of cargo handling equipment and storage.

    Subjects

    Science and Industry

    Costume and Textile Collection

    The collection includes examples of the traditional dress of canal boat people.

    Subjects

    Costume and Textile

    Social History Collection

    The collection holds examples of the traditional costume, tools and domestic objects of the boat people, including canal painted ware. Desks and other items of office equipment, paperwork and small items connected with waterways administration are used in displays and room settings.

    Subjects

    Social History

    Photographic Collection

    The collection includes a large collection of images of canals and canal workers. There is a video and film library.

    Subjects

    Photography

    Archives Collection

    Canal archives are a major source of information and historical evidence for the history of canals. Scarcely any company archives have survived, but a range of documentation does remain. The collection includes plans, maps, registers, documents, periodicals, books, sound, video and film material. It includes both company records and material from private collectors.

    Subjects

    Archives

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

National Wool Museum / Amgueddfa Wlân Cymru

Wikidata identifier:
Q6979452
Also known as:
Amgueddfa Wlân Cymru, National Wool Museum
Instance of:
national museum; museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1702
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q6979452/
Collection level records:
Yes, see Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales

Natural History Museum

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q26416684
Also known as:
All Saints Museum
Instance of:
museum; local authority museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
681
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q26416684/
Collection level records:
Yes, see

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    Natural History Collection

    The Natural History collection comprises of vertebrates, invertebrates, botanical and geological collections from the county of Essex.

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Natural History Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q309388
Also known as:
British Museum of Natural History, British Museum (Natural History), B.M.(N.H.), London Natural History Museum, NHMUK, Natural History Museum (London), BM(NH), British Natural History Museum, NHM London, The Natural History Museum, BMNH, Natural History Museum
Instance of:
natural history museum; national museum; herbarium; non-departmental public body
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1784
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q309388/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Natural History Museum at Tring

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q1788142
Also known as:
Tring Zoological Museum, Walter Rothschild Zoological Museum, Tring Museum
Instance of:
natural history museum; national museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
2067
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q1788142/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Wikipedia)

    The extensive collection includes extinct animals and birds such as the quagga, thylacine, great auk and reconstructions of the moa and dodo. Oddities include hybrids and examples of abnormal colouration. The dogs’ display was relocated to the Rothschild Zoological Museum from the Natural History Museum, South Kensington, London after World War II. This shows how domestic dogs have changed shape due to selective breeding and includes the tiny Russian and Mexican lapdogs as well as famous racing greyhounds. The Museum has six galleries, each one of which houses a different set of animals. The first gallery contains birds, large carnivorans and primates, the second is used to show temporary exhibits, the third crocodilians, crustaceans, fishes, insects, large mammals and marine invertebrates, the fourth accommodates kangaroos and odd-toed ungulates, the fifth holds bovids, hippopotamuses, pigs and marine mammals, and finally the sixth gallery contains amphibians, bats, various British mammals, domestic dogs, ratites, lizards, snakes, turtles and small mammals. The Museum also contains a Discovery Room designed for young children, and the Rothschild Room, which is set out to recreate the surroundings that the Rothschild family would have worked in. It became part of the Natural History Museum in 1937 and changed its name to the Natural History Museum at Tring in April 2007.

    The site is also home to the ornithological research collections (Bird Group, Department of Zoology) and the ornithological library (Department of Library and Information Services) of The Natural History Museum, but these are not open to the public.

    This article uses material from the Wikipedia article “Natural History Museum at Tring”, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

    Source: Wikipedia

    Date: 2025

    Licence: CC-BY-SA

Nature in Art

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q6980966
Also known as:
Nature in Art Gallery and Museum, Nature in Art Gallery & Museum
Instance of:
art museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
935
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q6980966/
Object records:
Yes, see object records for this museum

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    Back in 1982 Nature in Art Trust (then called The Society of Wildlife Art of the Nations) was founded as a registered charity, by Dr David Trapnell (1928 – 2023). Its first president was Sir Peter Scott, renowned not just for his paintings, but also for establishing the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust and co-founding the World Wide Fund for Nature. Nature in Art Trust was set up with the specific purpose of establishing and then managing a museum of art inspired by nature and thereby plugging a gap in the UK’s publically accessible collections.

    Man is a painter and always has been. As early as 25,000 BC the subjects of his first paintings were animals. If it was man’s capacity for rational and abstract thought that helped someone decide to call him Homo sapiens (wise man), he might equally aptly have been called Homo pictor (man the painter). Long before language was reduced to writing, people drew pictures on the walls of the caves which were their homes.

    From the tomb paintings of Egypt of around 2000 BC until the Middle Ages, man’s chief topic for his art was man, often depicted in his relationship to God and sometimes accompanied by domesticated or hunted animals and birds. With a few notable exceptions in China from about the ninth century AD onwards, it was not until the seventeenth century that artists turned again to give a significant proportion of their talents to making living, wild creatures the chief subject of their paintings, as distinct from decorative details in other pictures.

    It is surely a remarkable fact that, while nature was the first subject for man’s artistic attention, it was largely overlooked for thousands of years and has only in the last four centuries again become an important stimulus to his creative endeavour. Perhaps then it is a surprise that, as far as we know, it was not until the opening of Nature in Art in 1988 that the broad heritage of art inspired by nature has been exclusively collected, displayed and celebrated.

    While national art collections in many countries have been notable for the breadth and variety of their subject matter and the magnificent quality of the work they exhibit, they have largely neglected works of art depicting nature. Boosted by the growth all around the world of a sense of public and individual responsibility for conservation of the environment and our heritage in nature, and for inter-cultural dialogue, there is a new awareness of the value of fine examples of works of art from around the world which depict living things. Nature in Art responds to these trends.

    Dr David Trapnell’s vision was partly inspired by visits to the USA where his wife, artist Elizabeth Gray, was exhibiting her artwork, also inspired by nature. Links were made with collections in this field including the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Museum in Wisconsin where work by Elizabeth Gray is held in the permanent collection.

    At the time of its establishment the Trust had no collection or building and extremely limited funds. An Inaugural Exhibition was held in Guildhall in the City of London in 1985 which featured original works by some of the world’s foremost nature inspired artists, lent specifically for the exhibition. Opened by HRH Princess Alexandra it proved an effective springboard for moving the project forward.

    By 1988, a small collection of 120 works had been assembled (some donated from the Inaugural exhibition). The trustees were able to raise sufficient monies to purchase outright and then convert a fine Georgian mansion. As a result the museum ‘Nature in Art’ opened free of debt on May 28th 1988. Still today, without any guaranteed ongoing public or private funding, the museum has remained debt-free.

    Shortly after opening, a book, ‘Nature in Art’, was produced. Written by Dr David Trapnell and published by David and Charles, it featured many paintings and prints from the collection. The collection now stands at around 1300 items and is unique in its diversity and scope. The collection deliberately embraces a wide range of styles and media. Such diversity is important, not simply in collecting terms, but also to expand the visitor experience beyond their expectations.

    Over the years, the Trust has gratefully benefited from support from the likes of The Art Fund and the V&A Art Purchase Fund to acquire items, such as the most important painting in the collection, an oil on panel, “Noah and the Animals Entering the Ark”, attributed to Jan van Kessel (1660/1680), acquired in 1994. (This painting was loaned to a world-touring exhibition organised by the Victoria and Albert Museum). Other examples include a Malcolm Sutcliffe glass charger (1993), a Margaret Mee watercolour (1993), a Worcester quail pattern tea bowl and saucer (1995), a Jun Takegoshi (Japan) vase (1996), an Italian pietre dure table (1996), a Pilkington Lustreware vase (1997), an Anne Jones quilt (2001), a Japanese Cloisonne Koro (2002), a Jean Jules Dunand lacquer panel (2002), glass work by Jenny and Brian Blanthorn (2003), a Royal Doulton Lambeth Studio vase (2004), a Charles Frederick Tunnicliffe watercolour on paper ‘Green Gold and Dun’ (2006), Michael Porter’s’ oil and acrylic on canvas, ‘The Road to Issel’, (2007). a William de Morgan ceramic charger (2015) and a pencil drawing by Jospeh Wolf (2022).

    To complement the collection, a comprehensive programme of temporary exhibitions is held, often built around items from the collection, or on themes or artists already addressed by the collection. Some ready-curated exhibitions are also included from time to time, borrowed from other institutions.

    In 1989 the Museum was accepted for government indemnity which, for example, enabled the Trust to borrow five important paintings by Wilhelm Kunhert, Carl Rungius and Bruno Liljefors from the Rijksmuseum, Twenthe, Holland from 1990 – 2002.

    The focus of the collection remains unchanged. The Trust currently only collects items that it will display. It has not disposed of any items and has no plans to do so.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2024

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    As far as we know, it was not until the opening of Nature in Art in 1988 that the international heritage of art inspired by nature has been exclusively collected, displayed and celebrated by a museum anywhere. Probably boosted by the growth of a sense of public and individual responsibility for the conservation of our heritage in nature and the environment, and for inter-cultural dialogue, there is now also an awareness of the true artistic merit of fine examples of nature-inspired art that have been neglected in public art collections for too long.

    Quality in variety has been the consistent guiding principle of collecting by the Trust. The collection consists of top-quality examples of their kind of fine, decorative and applied art inspired by nature, in all media and styles. The following list demonstrates that some variety has already been achieved, shown by the different media and styles represented in the permanent collection, –

    • Fine art – from the 17th to the 21st century, from abstract to ‘representational’ in many styles and media from many historical and cultural/national origins.
    • Sculpture (many media & origins, 5th to 21st century)
    • Decorative and Applied art –
      • Aboriginal art
      • Arts nouveaux ceramics, fabrics, glass, tiles
      • Art deco – lacquered panel, tiles, woodblock prints
      • Batique
      • Carpets and kilims
      • Ceramics (particularly from local factories such as Bristol and Worcester) and stoneware, including items from Africa, Middle East (10th century), Japan, China
      • Cloisonné (Chinese and Japanese)
      • Designer book bindings
      • Fans (18th & 19th centuries)
      • Furniture – embroidered, inlaid and in forms inspired by nature
      • Glass, particularly c1760 and 19th century onwards and items made locally (including a strong collection of 20th century British studio glass)
      • Inlaid stone (jewellery, Italian casket, furniture, panels etc.)
      • Inuit art (stone, bone etc.)
      • Iron castings (Coalbrookdale etc.)
      • Ivories – mostly Chinese and Japanese (19th century)
      • Islamic art
      • Jewellery – particularly inlaid and other stones (19th, 20th centuries)
      • Lacquer work (Wolverhampton, European and Oriental)
      • Marquetry (objects and furniture)
      • Mosaics (5th – 20th centuries)
      • Natural ‘sculpture’ (‘Art in Nature’)
      • Needlework, quilt & tapestry (17th to 20th century; several countries)
      • Objects of virtue (mostly 19th century)
      • Prints of many types 17th to 21st century
      • Silver
      • Tiles c1830-1930s
      • Tribal art – prints, wood carvings

    Of the permanent collection, about 45% are decorative & applied arts and 40% pictures, but, including loans, paintings (in various media) and prints form nearly 50%.

    While some items in the collection date from the early 18th Century and earlier, works by 20th century artists are predominant.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2024

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Nautical Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q113363906
Instance of:
museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1900
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q113363906/
Collection level records:
Yes, see Manx National Heritage

Nene Valley Railway

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q2962386
Also known as:
Wansford and Peterborough
Instance of:
heritage railway; charitable organization; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1636
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q2962386/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    The museum has a substantial collection of British and European railway locomotives and rolling stock from 9 different countries including Sweden, Norway, Germany, Denmark, Belgium and France. There are 10 British steam locomotives, 7 European steam locomotives, and 14 British diesel locomotives, 2 British steam cranes, 25 British coaches, 14 European coaches, 66 items of British freight rolling stock and 1 European item of freight rolling stock. There are items of railway equipment such as a turntable from 1930 built for the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway and a platelayer’s pump-trolley from the Great Eastern Railway plus many smaller items of railwayania and an archive. The museum has a collection of printed ephemera, maps, plans, track diagrams, documents and books relating to the Blisworth to Peterborough line and railways of the Peterborough area. The museum has a collection of photographs relating to the Blisworth to Peterborough line and railways of the Peterborough area. Railway locomotives include British Rail Atlantic Conveyor, Southern Railway 92 Squadron, and British Rail City of Peterborough. Rolling stock includes SR 1218 4 wheel PMVY (Parcels & Miscellaneous Van) built 1936, SR 4920 Post Office Sorting Van (POS) built 1939, LMS 40284 6 wheel Fish Van built 1949, BR 1872 Mk 1 Restaurant Miniature Buffet built 1961, BR 87537 Blue Spot 4-wheel Fish Van built 1959, DSB Danish State 476 First/Third Composite Corridor built 1939, SNCB Belgian State 21033 First Class built 1934, Nord France 7122 Second Corridor built 1928, and CIWL 3916 Tricomposite Sleeping Car built 1949.

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

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