| Introduction Mission Statement History of the Morgan ↓ Pierpont Morgan: Banker Pierpont Morgan: Collector Architectural History Timeline The Morgan Campus Press Room Report to Donors |
About the Morgan | History of the MorganPierpont Morgan: Collector 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8
In general Pierpont Morgan's collecting proclivities followed accepted patterns of the day, favoring the older periods and schools of Western Europe. In 1911, for example, he purchased most of the group of some sixty Coptic manuscripts that had been discovered the year before in the ruins of a monastic library near the Egyptian village of Hamouli in the Fayum. In collecting autograph manuscripts, Morgan also sought many of the most popular figures of his own timeincluding Charles Dickens and Mark Twain, from whom he directly acquired the manuscript of Pudd'nhead Wilson in 1909. An unconventional interest was manifested through his impressive collection of ancient Near Eastern cylinder seals, which at his death numbered upward of twelve hundred. Today the Morgan's seal collection is one of the world's most important. He also acquired fine cuneiform tablets, most of which are now in the Babylonian Collection that he founded at Yale University. Continue » |


