The University of Cambridge's museums and collections are for everyone.

Together, the eight University of Cambridge Museums and Botanic Garden represent the UK’s highest concentration of internationally important collections outside London. With more than five million works of art, artefacts, and specimens, the collections have supported nearly 300 years of investigation into the world around us.

Today, they bring together people from across the world to explore the big questions: from the earliest forms of life to the future of our planet. We work to deepen understanding of our world, inspire new thinking, and address local and global challenges.

What we do

A lot happens behind the scenes. Like most museums and collections, our work centres on three areas:

  • We care for the collections and seek to understand them better
  • We share them with you and with the wider world online, and through exhibitions, events and activities
  • We use them to inspire and make a difference to our communities.

As University museums, we also have a distinctive mission to:

  • Research the collections to help us answer big questions and respond to global challenges such as climate change
  • Teach the next generation and work to widen access to the opportunities that higher education and cultural engagement can offer.

We work closely with the University’s other collections, as well as local and national partners. We are proud to be members of the national University Museums Group and Cambridge Arts and Cultural Leaders. 
 

About the collections

The history of the University of Cambridge Museums stretches back to 1728, and the founding of what would become the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences

Our collections can be read as a history book, documenting Cambridge's role in the development of Western knowledge. Alongside our objects, many of the museums hold field notes, books and other documents which reveal how Cambridge scholars set out to understand the world around them. The most famous of these might be Charles Darwin, and the Museum of Zoology holds some of the specimens collected on his voyage with HMS Beagle.

Other museums represent different ways of seeing the world, through the eyes of artists or craftspeople, and have their origins in private collections. Richard, Viscount Fitzwilliam's gift of art, antiquities and manuscripts to the University in 1816 sits at the heart of the Fitzwilliam Museum. Kettle's Yard, the home in the mid-20th century of Jim and Helen Ede, displays Jim's remarkable collection of modern art in the setting of their house.

Collections for everyone

We are committed to ensuring that all our work, and the way we do it, is as inclusive as possible. From our approach to researching the collections and sharing what we find to collaborating with communities and the development of our workforce, we are committed to positive institutional change. You can find out more about our inclusivity work and our approach to the return of objects on this website.

Find out more 

Read Collections in Action for an overview of our most recent work, and receive updates from across the consortium on our Blog

Since 2012, we’ve undertaken projects of all shapes and sizes, in collaboration with a huge variety of organisations. Find out more on our past projects page and in our 2021-2022 Year in Numbers
 

Museum ambassadors event

 

What's On

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
15 Apr 2021
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Trace Repton's career from its picturesque beginnings to the Gardenesque style which changed England’s relationship with nature forever

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
29 Apr 2021
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Looking at twelve selected trees, this half-day workshop will explore the lives of trees through a selection of their uses

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
14 May 2021
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This morning course will trip lightly through the biology of pistils, pastimes of pastoral poets and a plethora of amorous potions

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
20 May 2021
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Learn how The Society of Dilettanti influenced the Georgian landscape garden

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
24 May 2021
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This half-day session with Botanic Garden Director, Professor Beverley Glover, will explore the concept of colour in plants

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
26 May 2021
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Learn how, far from being a desert, Fenland is a biodiversity hotspot that merits study and conservation

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
06 Jul 2021
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This course will explore the chemistry and botany of the main edible plant families that contribute fruits and vegetables to the human diet

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
18 Jun 2021
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Taking inspiration from horticulture, history and literature we will explore how gardens and plants can be a "fatal attraction"

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
22 Jun 2021
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Come on a journey to far flung places to find out where our familiar and not so familiar spices come from

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
19 Jun 2021
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Take your hand sewing skills further with this traditional Dresden plate ‘chrysanthemum’ block

The Fitzwilliam Museum, Kettle's Yard
15 Mar 2021
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Join Kettle’s Yard, The Heong Gallery and The Fitzwilliam Museum for a live streamed drawing and sound performance by Syrian-born and Cambridge-based artist Issam Kourbaj, marking the tenth anniversary of the Syrian uprising – a crisis that resulted in violent armed conflict and ongoing civil war. This is a collaboration with composer Richard Causton and soprano Jessica Summers.

Kettle's Yard
15 Apr 2021
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oin Andrew Smith, one of our long-serving Visitor Assistants and our resident furniture enthusiast, for a talk on the often-overlooked pieces of furniture and hidden objects in the Kettle’s Yard House. The talk will look at some of the fascinating stories behind these pieces and why they are so important to Kettle’s Yard.

£15 (£12 Friends, £5 Students), booking required

Click here to book now

 

Kettle's Yard
29 Apr 2021
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Join us on 29 April, 13 May and 3 June for a three day online event series.

Museum of Classical Archaeology
27 Mar 2021
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How and why does classical antiquity live on in us and in our worlds? Join Lesley Saunders and Josephine Balmer for a poetry reading in this Cambridge Festival event.

Museum of Classical Archaeology
28 Mar 2021

The Museum of Classical Archaeology is home to more than 600 historical plaster casts. Join Curator Dr Susanne Turner on this virtual tour.

Museum of Classical Archaeology
26 Mar 2021

Do you know how colourful the ancient world was? In this activity for Cambridge Festival, we'll show you how to draw a simplified Ancient Greek Temple and decorate it.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
15 Mar 2021
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16 Apr 2021
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An opportunity to ask us your gardening questions and find out what we're up to in our veg garden!

The Fitzwilliam Museum
14 Apr 2021
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Join us for a three-way online conversation with specialists in Manuscripts and Printed Books as they reflect on the importance of touch in the making and conserving of medieval manuscripts, and how medieval readers themselves left traces – devout and destructive - of their touch.

Kettle's Yard
21 Apr 2021
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Join the Friends of Kettle’s Yard and Phil Neale, one of our Visitor Assistants and Chair of the T.E. Lawrence Society, for an online talk on the friendship and correspondence between Jim Ede and T.E. Lawrence, ‘Lawrence of Arabia’, and their mutual interest in art and literature, as well as their memories of India.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
07 Jul 2021
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In this online talk Dr Amy Tobin, curator of Exhibitions, Research and Events at Kettle’s Yard explores gender, art making, performance and desire in the works by three women artists featured in The Human Touch exhibition: Alexis Hunter, Ketty La Rocca and Geta Bratescu.

Kettle's Yard
19 May 2021
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An exhibition of works by the artist Alfred Wallis.

Kettle's Yard
10 Jul 2021
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Kettle’s Yard is pleased to present Untitled: art on the conditions of our time. This exhibition brings together work by 10 British African diaspora artists with a focus on how their innovative practices ask important questions about some of the most important cultural and political issues of our turbulent times. 

The Fitzwilliam Museum
27 May 2021
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Join us for an online discussion of the Anatomies of Touch with a specially invited panel:

Psychologist and broadcaster Claudia Hammond, hand surgeon James Hopkinson-Woolley, and artist Jane Dixon. The event will be chaired by Suzanne Reynolds and Elenor Ling, Co-Curators of 'The Human Touch'.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
01 May 2021
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As part of our monthly Family First events we have online activities you can join in with whilst the Museum is closed. For May, join our learning team to make a door hanging inspired by the protective scarab beetle in our ancient Egyptian collection.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
12 May 2021
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A free, online interactive session is for babies under 12 months and their carers.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
18 May 2021
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Touch is our first sense. Through touch we make art, stake a claim to what we own and those we love, express our faith, our belief, our anger. Touch is how we leave our mark and find our place in the world; touch is how we connect.

Drawing on works of art spanning four thousand years and from across the globe, this exhibition explores the fundamental role of touch in human experience, and offers new ways of looking.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
18 May 2021
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Plants have been used in the beauty and fragrance industry for thousands of years, from ancient times up until the present day. This exhibition features a range of works from our exceptional botanical collection, including watercolours, perfume vessels and scent bottles.

Kettle's Yard
16 Jun 2021
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Join us for an online conversation exploring the life and work of Alfred Wallis, inspired by our current exhibition Alfred Wallis Rediscovered.

Kettle's Yard
25 May 2021
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Join art critic Martin Gayford for a talk on his new book 'Spring Cannot Be Cancelled: David Hockney in Normandy' 

Museum of Zoology
30 Jun 2021
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Join us for the Zoology Live! Online Festival 2021. We have three fantastic livestreams lined up for you, broadcast live from the Museum of Zoology, including dissecting a cowpat!! Don't miss it! 

Kettle's Yard
22 Jun 2021
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Join art historian Sarah Burles for an online afternoon talk on the artist Winifred Nicholson (1893-1981). The talk will put Nicholson’s work at Kettle’s Yard into a wider context as well as discussing her friendship with Jim and Helen Ede.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
03 Jun 2021
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The Garden will be open late on Thursday evenings in June and July

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
13 Jun 2021
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Join us on a journey of DNA discovery

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
26 May 2021
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We are delighted to partner with the International Garden Photographer of the Year (IGPOTY) to offer a new free-to-enter special competition

The Fitzwilliam Museum
30 Jun 2021
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Edmund de Waal in conversation with Richard Calvocoressi.

The creativity of the artists hands and the marks and traces they leave is part of the narrative of the Fitzwilliam’s The Human Touch exhibition. Edmund de Waal has also been exploring the role of touch and the iconography of the hand in Henry Moores art in This Living Hand, an exhibition now showing at the Henry Moore Foundation at Perry Green in Hertfordshire.

 

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
07 Jul 2021
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Join our Assistant Curator, Dr Ángela Cano, on this course over two mornings, journeying through the many dimensions of tropical plant diversity.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
09 Jul 2021
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Join double RHS gold-medal winning artist Janie Pirie for this intermediate tutorial

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
15 Jul 2021
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Right plant, right place… we’ve all heard that before right? But what does it mean and how can we achieve it in our own gardens?