axe heads The museum has galleries covering the history of Northern Ireland from the earliest times to the very recent past, collections of art, mostly modern or ethnographic, historic and contemporary fashion and textiles, and also holds exhibitions. The scientific collections of the Ulster Museum contain important collections of Irish
birds,
mammals,
insects,
molluscs, marine
invertebrates,
flowering plants,
algae and
lichens, as well as an archive of books and manuscripts relating to
Irish natural history. The museum also maintains a natural history website named
Habitas. In the late 1980s and the early 1990s it had a permanent exhibition on
dinosaurs which has since been scaled back considerably. There is also a collection of
rocks,
minerals and
fossils. It is also home to Ireland’s only known dinosaur fossil bones.
Irish archaeology The museum contains significant finds from Northern Ireland, although in earlier periods these were often sent to the
British Museum or later Dublin, as with the
Broighter Hoard, now in the
National Museum of Ireland. Objects in the museum include the Malone Hoard of 19 polished
Neolithic axe heads, the Moss-side Hoard of
Mesolithic stone tools, the important Downpatrick Hoard of Bronze Age gold jewellery, part of the Late Roman Coleraine Hoard, the Viking Shanmullagh Hoard, and the medieval coins in the Armagh City Hoard and Armagh Castle Street Hoard. There are other significant objects of the Bronze Age gold jewellery for which Ireland is notable, including four of the 100-odd surviving
gold lunulae, and some important early
Celtic art, including a decorated bronze shield found in the
River Shannon, and the
Bann disc, bronze with
triskele decoration. File:UlsterMuseumPrehistoryMe (9).JPG|The Moss-side Hoard of
Mesolithic stone tools File:UlsterMuseumPrehistoryBrGoldLunulae (2).JPG|
Gold lunula from Ballybay File:Ulster Museum, Belfast, April 2012 (26).JPG|The important Downpatrick Hoard of Bronze Age gold jewellery File:UlsterMuseumPrehistoryBrRt (cropped).JPG|Bronze Age gold ribbon torcs, from near
Ballyrashane, County Londonderry File:Celtic Bronze Disc, Longban Island, Derry.jpg|
Bann disc, bronze with
triskele decoration File:Decorated bronze shield 1.JPG|Decorated bronze
Yetholm-type shield, found in the River Shannon at
Barrybeg, County Roscommon
Zoology skeleton
Historic collections •
Joseph Whitaker early 20th century, mounted birds from
Sicily. •
William Thompson mid-19th-century author of
Natural History of Ireland, Mollusca, birds, algae. •
Robert Templeton (Belfast, Colombo) mid-19th-century insects from
Ceylon. •
George Crawford Hyndman mollusca and Indian birds. •
William Monad Crawford early 20th-century
butterflies from
Burma. • Canon
William Frederick Johnson early 20th-century, Coleoptera. •
Charles Langham early 20th century, Irish insects European butterflies. •
H.M Peebles Himalayan snow butterflies (
Parnassiinae) •
Robert Welch early 20th-century Mollusca. •
Herbert T Malcolmson early 20th-century
James Sheals bird mounts (Ireland). •
Thomas Workman late 19th-century Lepidoptera
Recent collections •
Paul Wilcox (1943– ) butterflies of
Malaya. •
Paul Smart (1941– ) tropical butterflies •
Raymond Haynes Irish butterflies and moths •
James P. Brock Ichneumonidae •
Shell collections,
nudibranchs and
sea sponges •
J.R.Stoffel types of
Agrias butterflies
Important individual specimens •
Holotype of the
emperor penguin collected by
Captain Crozier of Banbridge • Champion Patrick of Ifold –
Irish Wolfhound •
Dwarf elephant skeletons from Sicily. • The
Egyptian
mummified body of
Takabuti. • Mummy case of
Tjesmutperet. •
Slender-billed curlew •
Rothschild's,
Queen Alexandra's and other
birdwing butterflies. •
Giant clam – given to the
Belfast Natural History Society by
Francis Walker •
Lammergeier mount by James Sheals •
Gervais' beaked whale (
Mesoplodon europaeus) •
Japanese spider crab •
Bonaparte's gull collected by
William Thompson – the first European specimen. •
Giant squid model •
Thylacine •
Coelacanth •
Bald eagle juvenile from near
Garrison, County Fermanagh on 11 January 1973. First European record. •
Passenger pigeon •
Irish elk •
Yellow-billed cuckoo (Irish specimen) •
Conus gloriamaris Wildlife art Mace, 1724 " northern exterior of Ulster Museum, by Francis Pym. The Zoology Department also maintains collections of wildlife art. Works by
Peter Scott,
Joseph Wolf,
Eric Ennion,
John Gerrard Keulemans,
Roger Tory Peterson,
Charles Tunnicliffe,
Robert Gillmor and
Archibald Thorburn are included. Illustrated works held by the Zoology Department include
British Entomology - being illustrations and descriptions of the genera of insects found in Great Britain and Ireland – a classic work of entomology by
John Curtis and
Niccolò Gualtieri's
Index Testarum Conchyliorum, quae adservantur in Museo Nicolai Gualtieri 1742.
Botany The herbarium (BEL) The
herbarium in the Ulster Museum (BEL), is based on specimens from
Belfast Natural History and Philosophical Society (founded in 1821); the
Belfast Naturalists' Field Club (founded in 1863); the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery (formed 1905) and the herbarium (BFT) of the Botany Department of
The Queen's University, Belfast acquired in 1968. In total the number of specimens is more than 100,000. Although specimens from Northern Ireland are well represented, specimens from elsewhere in the
world have been acquired by donation, exchange and purchase. All branches of the world's flora are represented: algae, lichens,
fungi,
mosses and
pteridophytes (ferns),
conifers and
angiosperms. Little information about the Irish flora before 1830 is available, the oldest specimen in the Ulster Museum is an alga:
Batrachospermum moniliforme (BEL: F41) collected in 1798 by John Templeton, other specimens of
Batrachospermum, originally incorrectly identified as
Thorea ramoissima were collected by John Templeton in 1815 from a "boghole" in
County Donegal (BEL:F42 – F47). It was originally published by Harvey in 1841.
List of some of the collectors • S.A.Bennett (1843–1929) • Corrie Denew Chase (1878–1965) (
vascular plants and algae) – his herbarium of about 4,000 sheets was passed to
Methodist College Belfast who passed it to the Ulster Museum in 1970. •
John Cocs (1787–1861) (algae) •
Thomas Huge Correl (1859–1883) (vascular plans). •
A. Fenton (A.F-G.Fenton) (lichens) •
M.Foslie (algae) •
Paul Hackney (1945– ) (vascular plants and
mosses) •
William Henry Harvey (1811–1866) (algae). •
George Crawford Hyndman (1796–1867) (algae). • Frederick Hugh Woodhams Kerr (1885–1958) (vascular plants) • Mary Patriria Happer Kertland (1901–1991) (vascular plants) •
William McCalla (c. 1814–1849) (algae). • Osborne Morton (b. 1945) (lichens and algae) •
Robert Lloyd Praeger (1865–1953) (vascular plants) •
Arthur Wilson Stelfox (1883–1972) (vascular plants; with
Myxomycete collected by his wife
Margarita Dawson Stelfox, and her associate
Margaret Williamson Rea) • Samuel Alexander Stewart (1826–1910) (vascular plants) •
John Templeton (1766–1825) (algae). •
William Thompson (1805–1852) (algae). •
Sylvanus Wear (1858–1920) (vascular plants and algae) •
Coslett Herbert Waddell (1858–1919) (vascular plants,
bryophytes and algae).
Art collections '' by
Clarkson Stanfield, 1861 The collection contains works by: •
Jean Dubuffet •
Morris Louis •
Anthony Caro •
Karel Appel •
Francis Bacon •
Colin Middleton •
Joseph Beuys •
Eduardo Paolozzi •
Jean-Robert Ipoustéguy •
Marjorie Bloch •
Clarkson Stanfield Fashion and textiles The Ulster Museum's Fashion & Textiles Collection aims to reflect the history of fashionable dress from as early as the 18th century, as well as contemporary international designer and high street fashion. It comprises approximately 5000 objects including garments, accessories, historic and contemporary jewellery, and a collection of dolls and toys including pieces by
Armand Marseille. The museum's policy is to collect clothing and accessories as an
Applied Art, with an emphasis on acquiring pieces that are of high design quality and/or representative of significant changes in fashion history. The collection includes eighteenth-century
Spitalfields silk gowns, early 20th century Parisian
couture, and contemporary international fashion . Designers represented in the collection include
Chanel,
Dior,
Alexander McQueen,
John Galliano,
Vivienne Westwood and
JW Anderson. The textiles collection includes pieces by important female Irish embroiders, such as the 'Lennox Quilt' of 1712 by Martha Lennox, and a bedcover by the renowned eighteenth-century letter-writer and artist, Mrs
Mary Delany. The Antrim bed furniture, a complete set worked by or under the supervision of Lady Helena McDonnell, 1705–83, daughter of the 4th Earl of Antrim was purchased in 1982. Tapestries include 'Arabesque' by Joshua Morris and the mid-20th century Adam and Eve by
Louis le Brocquy. The textiles collection also includes two large linen wall hangings, Océanie – Le Ciel and Océanie – La Mer, by the French artist
Henri Matisse.
Malone House fire The Ulster Museum's original collection of costume and textiles was almost completely destroyed in a fire following the 1976 bombing of Malone House in Belfast in November 1976, during
the Troubles. Malone House was a large house in a public country park and was the headquarters of the
National Trust in Northern Ireland at the time. By Autumn 1976 the Ulster Museum's original costume and textile collection had been moved from unsuitable storage in the museum to Malone House. The museum held the top floor of the building which had been converted into costume and textile storage areas and a textile conservation workshop. On 11 November, gunmen gained entry to Malone House and planted two bombs, one on the ground floor and on the first floor. A five-minute warning was given, and everyone in the building was safely evacuated. Although some rooms on the ground floor were relatively unharmed, the costume and textile collection on the second floor collapsed on top of the fire and quickly perished. The collection included a collection of linen damask that was reckoned to be the best in the world after that of the
Victoria and Albert Museum and the
Rijksmuseum. Both Irish and Continental linens were represented. One of the earliest items of costume destroyed in the fire was a lady's jacket of around 1600 with well-preserved polychrome silk and silver thread embroidery. The original Ulster Museum costume collection had a good selection of 18th-century garments costume, most with local connections such as a Spitalfields silk robe and petticoat of c. 1745 which had on the linen lining the stamp 'Sam Holmes –
County Down'. Specimens of ladies' dresses existed for almost every year from the end of the eighteenth century until the 1970s. There were gaps in the range of men's costume, the eighteenth century being one of the best represented periods. The lace collection was comprehensive but with a bias towards Irish manufacturers. Lace had been collected on a proper systematic basis for longer than any other category of costume or textiles. Rebuilding the collection was helped by the museum's right to government compensation to indemnify its losses. This enabled the museum to purchase historic fashion and couture from auctions in Christies and Sothebys on a regular basis throughout the late 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. This enabled the Ulster Museum, almost alone in Great Britain, to be able to compete with American and continental dealers on equal terms for items which were considered particularly appropriate to the collection. Notable pieces in the collection include a cut velvet and metal thread suit worn by the
Irish Black Rod in the
Irish House of Lords in 1751, a number of very fine women's outfits of mid 18th century Spitalfields silk. It is the 20th-century haute couture and contemporary fashions are the most distinctive elements of the collection. Many important designers are represented, from Paul Poiret, Coco Chanel and Christian Dior to Alexander McQueen, John Galliano and Vivienne Westwood.
Collecting Contemporary Fashion Since 1984 the Ulster Museum has acquired both International Designer Outfit, High Street Outfit every year. This policy has enabled the Ulster Museum to build a comprehensive overview of late 20th and 21st-century fashion. Recent acquisitions include a 'We Should All Be Feminists' t-shirt by Maria Grazia Chiuri for Dior, pieces by JW Anderson, and pieces by Raf Simons for Calvin Klein. The Ulster Museum holds work by most important 20th century Paris designers and very many post-war English and Irish designers. High Street labels such as Wallis and Etam are also represented. Magazines and contemporary photographs are systematically kept to complement actual specimens. •
Bronze statues from the
Chola Dynasty. •
Samurai armour. •
Solomon Islands war canoe. (Similar boat).
Girona Girona The museum acquired in 1971
Spanish Armada artefacts from the
galleass Girona, which sank off Ireland in 1588 . ==Controversy at the 132nd Royal Ulster Academy exhibition==