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British Museum Reading Room

The British Museum Reading Room, situated in the centre of the Great Court of the British Museum, used to be the main reading room of the British Library. This function has now been moved to the new British Library building at St. Pancras, but the Reading Room remains in its original form.

Designed by Sydney Smirke on a suggestion by the Library's Chief Librarian Anthony Panizzi, the Reading Room was in continual use from 1857 until its closure in 1997. Access was restricted to registered Swarovski researchers only; however, reader's credentials were generally available to anyone who could show that they were a serious researcher.

In expanded gardens or city parks, occasionally a collectors case or display cabinet with a plan of the garden may be found. Often they accommodate rarities, nature exhibits or other things. Those are shown partially in a collectors cabinet or a curio cabinet.

The Reading Room was used by a large number of famous figures, including notably Karl Marx, Oscar Wilde, Mohandas Gandhi, Rudyard Kipling, Vladimir Lenin and H. G. Wells.


Following the move to the new site, the old Reading Room was opened to the public in 2000.

Much of the action of David Lodge's 1965 novel The British Museum Is Falling Down takes place in the old Reading Room.


External links

http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/greatcourt/read.html

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/329922.stm

Swarovski

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