The Fitzwilliam Museum was described by the Standing Commission on Museums & Galleries in 1968 as “one of the greatest art collections of the nation and a monument of the first importance”. It owes its foundation to Richard, VII Viscount Fitzwilliam of Merrion who, in 1816, bequeathed to the University of Cambridge his works of art and library, together with funds to house them, to further “the Increase of Learning and other great Objects of that Noble Foundation”.

Fitzwilliam’s bequest included 144 pictures, among them Dutch paintings he inherited through his maternal grandfather and the masterpieces by Titian, Veronese and Palma Vecchio he acquired at the Orléans sales in London. During a lifetime of collecting, he filled more than 500 folio albums with engravings, to form what has been described as “a vast assembly of prints by the most celebrated engravers, with a series of Rembrandt’s etchings unsurpassed in England at that time”. His library included 130 medieval manuscripts and a collection of autograph music by Handel, Purcell and other composers which has guaranteed the Museum a place of prominence among the music libraries of the world.

Cambridge’s Fitzwilliam Museum

Cambridge’s Fitzwilliam Museum has remarkable collections of art and antiquities from Egypt, the Ancient Near East, Greece, Rome and Cyprus.

Few museums in the world contain on a single site collections of such variety and depth. Writing in his Foreword to the catalogue of the exhibition for Treasures from the Fitzwilliam which toured the United States in 1989-90, the then Director of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, wrote that “like the British Museum, the Fitzwilliam addresses the history of culture in terms of the visual forms it has assumed, but it does so from the highly selective point of view of the collector connoisseur. Works of art have been taken into the collection not only for the historical information they reveal, but for their beauty, excellent quality, and rarity… It is a widely held opinion that the Fitzwilliam is the finest small museum in Europe”.

 

Opening times:
Free Admission including temporary exhibitions
Open 7 days a week, 10am – 5pm

Address:
The Fitzwilliam Museum
Trumpington Street,
Cambridge CB2 1RB
Telephone: +44 1223 332900
Fax +44 1223 332923

Internet:
fitzmuseum-enquiries@lists.cam.ac.uk
http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk