Lahore Museum
لاہور عجائب گھر | |
Entrance to the museum | |
Established | 1865, later shifted to present site 1894 |
---|---|
Location | The Mall, Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan |
Coordinates | 31°34′06″N 74°18′29″E / 31.568226°N 74.308174°E |
Type | Archaeology, art, heritage, modern history, religious |
Collection size | Pre & Proto, Coins, Hindu Buddhist & Jain, Gandhara, Islamic, Manuscripts, Miniature Paintings, General Collection, Arms, Ethnological, Postage & Stamps, Arts & Crafts, Contemporary Paintings, Pakistan Movement Gallery |
Visitors | 250,000 in 2005[1] |
Website | Official website |
The Lahore Museum (Punjabi: لاہور میوزیم, Urdu: لاہور عجائب گھر), was originally established in 1865-66 on the site of the hall or building of the 1864 Punjab Exhibition[2] and later shifted to its present site located on The Mall, Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan in 1894.
Rudyard Kipling's father, John Lockwood Kipling, was one of the earliest and most famous curators of the museum.[3] The next curator was K. N. Sitaram.
Over 250,000 visitors were registered in 2005.[1]
The current building of Lahore Museum was designed by the well-known architect Sir Ganga Ram. The Museum is the biggest museum of the country. A number of rooms have been under repair for a long time and others still show a rather old-fashioned and often rudimental display of objects, with Urdu captions only.
Collections
The Museum contains some fine specimens of Mughal and Sikh door-ways and wood-work and has a large collection of paintings dating back to the Mughal, Sikh and British periods. It includes a collection of musical instruments, ancient jewellery, textiles, pottery, and armory. There are important relics from the Indus Valley civilisation, Gandhara and Graeco-Bactrian periods as well as some Tibetan and Nepalese work on display. The museum has a number of Greco-Buddhist sculptures, Mughal and Pahari paintings on display.The Fasting Buddha from the Gandhara period is one of the most famous objects of the museum. The ceiling of the entrance hall features a large mural by renowned Pakistani artist Sadequain.
Scope of Lahore Museum
The Museum displays archaeological materials from pre-historic times to the Hindu Shahi period. It has one of the largest collections of archaeology, history, arts, fine arts, applied arts, ethnology, and craft objects in Pakistan.It also has an extensive collection of Hellenistic and Mughal coins. A photo gallery is dedicated to the emerging of Pakistan as a state.
Timings & Entry Fee
Lahore Museum observes working hours as follows:
Winter:(October 16 to April 15) 9.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m.
Summer:(April 16 to October 15) 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Adults: Rs.20/-
Children: Rs.5/-
Students: Rs.5/-
Foreigners:Rs.400/-
Camera Charges: Rs.25/-
Note:
Weekly Holiday of the Museum is Friday, whereas it remains closed on First Monday of each month for general public for maintenance. It also closes on actual days of Eid-ul-Fitr, Eid-ul-Azha, Eid-i-Milad-un-Nabi and 9th & 10th of Muharram.
Popular culture
- Rudyard Kipling's novel, Kim (pub. 1901), was set in the vicinity of the old/original Lahore Museum and the Mall areas.
Further reading
- Shaila Bhatti (2012), Translating museums: a counterhistory of South Asian museology, Walnut Creek, Calif: Left Coast Press, ISBN 9781611321449
- Whitehead, Richard Bertram (1914). Catalogue of Coins in the Panjab Museum, Lahore; Indo-Greek Coins : Volume 1. The Panjab Government at The Clarendon Press, Oxford.
- Whitehead, Richard Bertram (1914). Catalogue of Coins in the Panjab Museum, Lahore; Coins of Mughal Emperors: Volume 2. The Panjab Government at The Clarendon Press, Oxford.
See also
References
- 1 2 Areas of Attraction - Government of Pakistan
- ↑ Which later became the Tollinton Market after the completion of the new/present museum building, see "Murray's Handbook of the Punjab", pub. 1883. Mention also made in Peter Hopkirk, "Quest for Kim", London, 1996, pp.46-47 ISBN 0-7195-5560-4
- ↑ The old, original one prior to 1893
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lahore Museum. |
- Lahore Museum Official Website
- Lahore Museum as it looked in 1900
- Lahore Museum at Google Cultural Institute