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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

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