Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Montagu House (sometimes spelled "Montague") was a late 17th-century mansion in Great Russell Street in the Bloomsbury district of London, which became the first home of the British Museum. The first house on the site was destroyed by fire in 1686.

  2. Montagu House in Whitehall, Westminster, London, England, was the town house built by John Montagu, 2nd Duke of Montagu (1690–1749), whose country seat was Boughton House in Northamptonshire.

  3. Jun 23, 2017 · It was rebuilt to a similar design and it is this second Montagu House that was to become the first home of the British Museum. It was a beautiful French-style house with an ornate interior decorative scheme, described in its day as one of the finest private houses in London.

  4. Montagu House was built by the first Duke of Montagu, who 'made money like a rogue and spent it like a gentleman' on his patronage of the arts, the finest examples of which were to be found in this London house which was to become the first home of the British Museum.

  5. He built Montagu House, in Bloomsbury, London, in 1675–80 to the designs of Robert Hooke; it contained some of Antonio Verrio’s finest frescoes. Bought by the government in 1753 to hold the national collection of antiquities, it became the nucleus of the British Museum and Library.

  6. Jul 8, 2024 · CHAPTER 19: LXXVIMONTAGU HOUSE Ground Landlords. The property is the freehold of the Crown, and is used for the purposes of the Ministry of Labour. Old Montagu House. The ground comprising the site of Montagu House and its appurtenances is composed of eight different parcels of land.

  7. Sep 17, 2021 · Until the mid-1950s, the site of the Nobu Hotel and Portman Towers at the north-west corner of Portman Square in Marylebone was occupied by Montagu House, a freestanding townhouse set in one of London’s largest private gardens.