IN THE SUMMER of 1634, an exhibition was held in a large house in Lambeth, London. It would have a major impact on the cultural life of England, and on cities far beyond our shores. It would set a fashion, in time becoming an institution. It would open up education to the masses, in much the same way the invention of the printing press had done two centuries earlier.
The exhibition was organised by John Tradescant. It offered the public the chance to view his collection, a wide-ranging selection of curious and fascinating objects—animal, vegetable and mineral—from all around the world.
One visitor summed up the amazement of what became known as "The Ark". Here was a place, he said, “Where a man might in one daye behold…more curiosities than hee would see if hee spent all his lifetime in Travell”.
Tradescant’s collection was part of a Europe-wide craze that had begun during or cabinet of curiosities. Tsar of Russia Peter the Great, Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, Archduke of Austria Ferdinand II, and Augustus the Strong of Saxony all had collections that matched or exceeded Tradescant’s Ark in size.