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The Royal Society of Arts, whose correct name is the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures & Commerce but which is more commonly known as the RSA, is a British multi-disciplinary institution, based in London, which exists to deliver five Manifesto Challenges:

encouraging enterprise moving towards a zero waste society fostering resilient communities developing a capable population advancing global citizenship

It was founded in 1754 by William Shipley as the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce. It was granted a Royal Charter in 1847. Notable members have included Benjamin Franklin, Karl Marx, Adam Smith, William Hogarth, Charles Dickens and Guglielmo Marconi.

Notwithstanding its establishment credentials, the RSA has always been a radical body which has sought to challenge the status quo and change the world around it. Its founders spoke of the need to "embolden enterprise, enlarge science, refine art, improve our manufactures and extend our commerce", but also of the need to alleviate poverty and secure full employment.

In 1774 it moved into a new building in central London, near the Strand, and purpose-designed by the Adam Brothers (James Adam, Robert Adam) as part of their innovative Adelphi scheme. The RSA is still in occupation, although it has also expanded into adjacent buildings in the intervening years. The building includes the Great Room which features a magnificent sequence of paintings by Irish artist James Barry: "The progress of human knowledge and culture".

In its early years the Society offered prizes - which it called "premiums" - for people who could successfully achieve one of a number of published challenges. Captain William Bligh suffered the Mutiny on the Bounty while attempting to win a premium for shipping breadfruit from the East to the West Indies. He subsequently repeated the voyage and this time succeeded, and the Society awarded him the prize. The Society offered premiums for a very wide range of challenges including devising new forms of machinery and agricultural improvements.

The RSA hosted Britain's first exhibition of contemporary art which was a big success. As a result, the Royal Academy of Arts was formed in 1768 by Sir Thomas GainsboroughBlue boy painted 1770 by Thomas Gainsborough Thomas Gainsborough ( May 14 1727 (baptised) August 2, 1788) was one of the most famous portrait and landscape painters of 18th century Britain. Gainsborough was born in 1727 in Sudbury, Suffolk, England. His f and Sir Joshua ReynoldsSir Joshua Reynolds ( July 16, 1723 February 23, 1792) was the most important and influential of eighteenth-century English painters, specialising in portraits and promoting the "Grand Style" in painting which depended on idealization of the imperfect. - two early members of the RSA - as a spin-off organisation.

The RSA is probably best known for creating the RSA Examinations Board, now part of the separate OCRThe OCR Oxford, Cambridge and RSA exam board is a British organisation that sets examinations and awards qualifications (including GCSEs and A-levels). It is one of England and Wales's four main examination boards: the others are Edexcel, AQA and the WJEC (Oxford, Cambridge and RSA Examinations) Board, following the Society's launch of the modern world's first public examinations in 1882.

It devised a scheme for commemorating the links between famous people and buildings by placing plaques on the walls - these continue today as " blue plaqueGreater London Council blue plaque at Alexandra Palace, commemorating the launch of BBC Television there in 1936. A blue plaque is a sign attached to a house where someone famous once lived (or sometimes where a notable event took place) to commemorate ths" which are administered by a range of government bodies. The first of these plaques was, in fact, of red terracotta erected outside a former residence of Lord Byron (since demolished). The Society instigated 36 plaques until in 1901 responsibility for them was transferred to the London County CouncilCounty of London, shown within a map of England's 1890 counties London County Council (LCC was the principal local government body for the County of London from 1889 until 1965, when it was replaced by the Greater London Council. It covered the area today (which changed the colour of the plaques to the current blue) and later the Greater London CouncilGLC can also stand for the UK rap group named Goldie Lookin' Chain. The Greater London Council (GLC was the top-tier local government administrative body for Greater London from 1965 to its abolition in 1986. Prior to the GLC London had the Metropolitan B and most recently English Heritage.

The National Training School for Music in London was founded by the Society in 1876. This was later succeeded by the Royal College of Music.

In 1908, King Edward VII granted it the right to use the term "Royal" in its name.

The Society was instrumental in the preservation of West Wycombe, purchashing the entire village and handing it over the National Trust.

More recently, the Society launched a project to exhibit works of contemporary art on an empty fourth plinth in London's Trafalgar Square, is working to deliver fresh drinking water to the developing world, and is rethinking intellectual property from first principles to produce a Charter. It is investigating schemes to manage international migration, is promoting the practise of inclusive design, and is working with artists to communicate ideas about environmental sustainability.

The Society runs a public lecture programme which seeks to introduce new and challenging thinking. These lectures are published in its own Journal and made freely available on its website. An example of the Society's success is offered by the Oxford English Dictionary, which records the first use of the word "sustainability" in an environmental sense in the RSA's Journal in 1980.

Each year a number of medals are awarded, including the Albert medal, the Benjamin Franklin Medal, and the Bicentennary Medal. Medal winners include Nelson Mandela, Sir Frank Whittle and Professor Stephen Hawking.

The Society is Incorporated by Royal Charter, is registered in England as a Charity, and has more than 20,000 Fellows who live in around 70 countries. Its Patron is currently HM Queen Elizabeth II, its President is HRH Prince Philip, and its Chair is Sir Paul Judge.



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