Government Museum, Bengaluru

Government Museum, Bengaluru, established in 1865 by the Mysore State with the guidance of Surgeon Edward Balfour who founded the museum in Madras and supported by the Chief Commissioner of Mysore, L.B. Bowring,[1] is one of the oldest museums in India[3] and the second oldest museum in South India.[1] It is now an archaeological museum and has a rare collection of archaeological and geological artifacts including old jewellery, sculpture, coins and inscriptions. The museum is also home to the Halmidi inscription,[4] the earliest Kannada inscription (450 AD).

Government Museum, Bengaluru
Front façade of the museum
Map
Established18 August 1865[1]
LocationKasturba Road, Bengaluru, India
Coordinates12°58′29″N 77°35′45″E / 12.9747°N 77.5958°E / 12.9747; 77.5958
Key holdingsHalmidi inscription
Collection sizeSculpture, old jewellery, coins and inscriptions.
Visitors90,000 per annum[2]

History

edit

Foundation

edit
 
Portrait of Edward G. Balfour at the Madras Museum

The government museum in Bengaluru was established on 18 August 1865,[1] during the period when L.B. Bowring was Chief Commissioner of Mysore State. A formal official notification was issued in the Mysore Government Gazette on 17 April 1866,[1] a copy of which is still preserved in the Karnataka State Archives in Bengaluru. The gazette notification officially invited citizens to contribute cultural and natural artifacts to the museum for display.

The museum was founded at the advice and counsel of Edward G. Balfour, a medical officer of the Madras Army, transferred to Bengaluru from Madras.[1] Balfour suggested setting up a museum similar to the museum he had previously established in Madras in 1851. Balfour had organized collections for the Great Exhibition of 1851. Balfour had a collection of zoological and natural specimens to exhibit in the Museum.[1] The Government museum in Bangalore was then known as the Mysore Government Museum and the building opened in 1877[5] was located on what was then Sydney road (today Kasturba road).[6]

First home

edit

The museum was first established at the Cantonment's jail building.[1] It continued to function there for 13 years until 1878.

New building

edit

The jail building was considered not suitable for a museum and it was decided to construct a special museum building near the Cantonment. The current site of the museum was identified for the new museum. The new museum (the current structure) was planned and built in 1877[7] by Col. Richard Hieram Sankey, the Chief Engineer of Mysore State at that time.[1]

The museum was popularly known as the tamasha house (entertainment house).[1]

Building

edit

The museum is flanked by the Visvesvaraya Industrial And Technological Museum and the Venkatappa Art gallery. The museum is located centrally on Kasturba road. The museum is built in 1877 in the neoclassical architectural style. It has two porticos on either side, Corinthian columns, circular arches, sloping eaves and prominent sloping parapet walls.

Collections

edit
 
A replica of the original Halmidi inscription

The museum has two exhibition floors which are divided into 18 galleries. The galleries cover sections that span sculpture, natural history, geology, art, music and numismatics.

The museum is an archaeological museum and has a rare collection of archaeological and geological artifacts including old jewellery, sculpture, coins and inscriptions. The museum has 70 paintings, 84 sculptures, and hundreds of other artifacts, some of which unique to the museum.[2] The museum has sculpture from the Hoysala, Gandhara and Nolamba periods.

Neolithic pottery from excavations carried out at Chandravalli, excavations artifacts from Mohenjodaro, Halebid and Vijayanagar, terracotta from Mathura and weapons from Kodagu.[2] Many relics housed at the museum are as much as 5000 years old. The museum also houses rare paintings of Deccan, Mysore and Tanjore kingdoms are found.

The museum has a model of Srirangapatna, the fort of Tipu Sultan. There is a slab in the museum from Tipu's times that has 12 persian couplets. The museum also showcases various old musical instruments. A Tanjore style framework of 64 Nayanamars is a unique piece there.

The prized collections of the Museum include the earliest Kannada inscription- the Halmidi inscription (450 C.E.),[4] Begur inscription (890 C.E.),[8] Atakur inscription (949 C.E.) slabs are found in this museum.

Visitors

edit

The museum saw many visitors in the early part of its history. The average annual footfall was 280,000 in the 1870s and over 400,000[2] in the early part of the 20th century[2] as per museum records catalogued by the British. According to museum officials, the annual number of visitors is over 90,000 consisting of domestic and international tourists.[2]

The museum is temporarily closed to visitors for its renovation. It will stay closed for about a year according to some press reports.[9]

Governance

edit

The Karnataka State Archaeology Department governs the museum. it comes under the purview of the Directorate of Archaeology and Museums.[10] The 13th Finance Commission of India has sanctioned 1 billion as a grant to Karnataka for the conservation of monuments and development of museums.[10]

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j S. K. Aruni (14 March 2012). "Nuggets of heritage stored for posterity". The Hindu. Bangalore. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Mohit. M Rao (26 March 2012). "When a museum turns into a relic of the past". The Hindu. Bangalore. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  3. ^ Sudhindr. A. B. (3 May 2010). "Exploring the wonders of Bangalore". The Hindu. Chennai, India. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  4. ^ a b Khajane, Muralidhara (31 October 2006). "An apt time to get classical language tag". The Hindu. Hassan. Archived from the original on 1 October 2007. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  5. ^ Hendley, T. Holbein (1914). "Indian museums: a centenary retrospect". Journal of the Royal Society of Arts. 62 (3193): 207–221.
  6. ^ Furneaux, JH (1895). Glimpses of India. Philadelphia: Historical Publishing company. p. 422.
  7. ^ Meera Iyer (2012). "Why we shouldn't forget Sankey". Deccan Herald. Bangalore. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  8. ^ Meera Iyer (December 2009). "Why the relics still lie here." Deccan Herald. Begur. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  9. ^ "Bangalore's Government Museum Closes But Only For A Makeover". Explocity Bangalore. 10 January 2024.
  10. ^ a b R. Krishna Kumar (2 January 2011). "117 monuments in State identified for restoration". The Hindu. Chennai, India. Archived from the original on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  11. ^ Curzon Collection's 'Souvenir of Mysore Album'. 1890. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
edit