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

Kettle's Yard
15 Aug 2021
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Join us in St Peter’s Churchyard, just next door to Kettle’s Yard, for free, practical art making workshops.

Kettle's Yard
29 Aug 2021
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Join us in St Peter’s Churchyard for free, practical art making activities. Be inspired by Kettle’s Yard and make your own artworks. Pick up one of our family art activity packs and get creative with our artists. You can collect your materials to make outside at Kettle’s Yard or take them home with you.

Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences
03 Aug 2021
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A special event at the Sedgwick Museum aimed at children with special educational needs who usually find visiting museums overwhelming due to conditions that affect their sensory processing and/or have a developmental disability. 

Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
12 Aug 2021
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A special event at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology aimed at children with special educational needs who usually find visiting museums overwhelming due to conditions that affect their sensory processing and/or have a developmental disability. 

The Fitzwilliam Museum
16 Aug 2021
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A special event at the Fitzwilliam Museum aimed at children with special educational needs who usually find visiting museums overwhelming due to conditions that affect their sensory processing and/or have a developmental disability. 

The Fitzwilliam Museum
08 Sep 2021
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Three artists using clay, Jayne Ivimey, Elspeth Owen and Mella Shaw, talk about their upcoming group exhibition Breaking Point: fragility in clay and nature which is on show at the University Museum of Zoology, Cambridge

The Fitzwilliam Museum
13 Oct 2021
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Soon after the Greek Revolution, the Acropolis was cleared of its Medieval buildings. Byzantine icons too were shunned, even in University Museum collections. This lecture touches on icons in the Fitzwilliam but focuses on the fate of one icon in the Yale University Art Museum, acquired in 1871, but hidden in its storeroom until now.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
29 Sep 2021
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Join Rebecca Roberts, Curator of Gold of the Great Steppe, for an online talk introducing the exhibition, its themes and highlight objects.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
24 Nov 2021
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As we take in the splendour and beauty of the gold artefacts from the Great Steppe, we can’t help but wonder about their prehistoric makers and users: Where did they obtain the precious metal? What tools and techniques did they employ to turn it into the elaborate artefacts we admire today? How did they learn their skills? Were these objects used in life, or made for the dead? Scientific analyses provide some answers but also raise new questions.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
10 Nov 2021
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Join us online for a conversation between ceramic artist Magdalene Odundo DBE and organising Curator, Helen Ritchie, who will discuss Magdalene Odundo in Cambridge.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
19 Oct 2021
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Join Fitzwilliam Museum Curator, Helen Ritchie, for a brief introduction (approx. 30 minutes) to Magdalene Odundo in Cambridge. Curated by ceramic artist Magdalene Odundo DBE, this display marks 50 years since Odundo moved from Kenya to Cambridge to study at Cambridge School of Art and brings together a selection of global collections from Cambridge collections with examples of her own unmistakeable work.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
16 Nov 2021
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Join Rebecca Roberts, Curator of Gold of the Great Steppe, for a spotlight talk in the 'Gold of the Great Steppe' exhibition, introducing key themes and highlight objects.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
08 Dec 2021
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Drawing from our rich holdings of paintings, drawings, prints, ceramics and sculpture, ‘Women: makers and muses’ is the first display in an on-going series highlighting work by women throughout the history of art and from across the globe. A series of films made in response to the display in which curators offer further thoughts on featured artworks will be followed by a Q&A with Jane Munro and Rebecca Birrell.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
07 Oct 2021
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An exclusive early morning tour of our exhibition, Gold of the Great Steppe (opening 28 September), with members of the team behind the show.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
28 Sep 2021
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Gold of The Great Steppe will display an archaeological sensation. Hundreds of outstanding 2,700 year old gold artefacts recently discovered in the extraordinary ancient burial mounds built by the Saka people in East Kazakhstan will be exhibited for the first time in the UK.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
10 Sep 2021

Pick up a special animal card on your way into the Garden this autumn to create your own artwork as you explore with your family.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
05 Oct 2021
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Have fun screen printing onto textiles taking inspiration from the plants at the Garden

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
09 Oct 2021
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A series of courses giving a comprehensive introduction to horticulture across the gardening year

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
09 Oct 2021
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A series of courses giving a comprehensive introduction to horticulture across the gardening yearA series of courses giving a comprehensive introduction to horticulture across the gardening year

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
12 Oct 2021
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Explore, experience and learn how watercolour works with professional painter John Wiltshire

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
14 Oct 2021
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Join tutor Jackie Bennett in a journey through gardens and poetry

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
19 Oct 2021
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Join tutor Laura Mayer for a morning examining the man behind the famous nickname

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
21 Oct 2021
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Join Paul Herrington to explore how we can celebrate water in our gardens, however big or small

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
28 Oct 2021
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Explore the medieval view of illness, and the plants involved in the prevention and treatment of disease

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
06 Nov 2021
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An introduction to the simple technique of drypoint etching and chine collé

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
10 Nov 2021
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Explore the lives and plant contributions of these overlooked women plant collectors from the 18th – 20th centuries

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
13 Nov 2021
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A series of courses giving a comprehensive introduction to horticulture across the gardening year

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
18 Nov 2021
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Taking inspiration from the Garden, come and join Caroline Henricksen for a fun relaxing and creative day paper collaging flowers

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
23 Nov 2021
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Explore the history and ecology of the boulder-clay woods of Cambridgeshire and its region

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
25 Nov 2021
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Try something new with this perfect sized beginners' project

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
03 Dec 2021
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Start your festive season and make your own garden-inspired festive wreath

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
10 Dec 2021
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Start your festive season and make your own garden-inspired festive wreath

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
07 Dec 2021
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Enjoy a day creating Christmas decorations with rush and willow

The Polar Museum
23 Oct 2021
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Join us at the Polar Museum for our Family Friendly Opening Day this half-term.

The Polar Museum
25 Oct 2021
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Join us at the Polar Museum with renowned storyteller Marion Leeper to explore life under water.

Kettle's Yard
21 Oct 2021
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‘The Tippett Quartet’s performances are little
short of astonishing’ – The Times

Join us as we welcome our Chamber Music concerts back to Kettle’s Yard.

Kettle's Yard
28 Oct 2021
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Join us for a Chamber Music concert in the Kettle’s Yard House featuring Nicholas Daniel, oboe and Huw Watkins on piano.

Some of the best oboe playing you’ll hear anywhere. Record Review

Kettle's Yard
04 Nov 2021
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Tabea Debus is one of the most exciting young musicians in the early music worldClassic FM

Join us for a Chamber Music concert in the Kettle’s Yard House featuring Tabea Debus on recorder and Toby Carr on lute.

Kettle's Yard
11 Nov 2021
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Join us for a Chamber Music concert in the Kettle’s Yard House featuring the Gould Piano Trio.

Kettle's Yard
18 Nov 2021
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Join us for a Chamber Music concert in the Kettle’s Yard House featuring the Marsyas Trio.