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The Deutsches Museum (German Museum, officially Deutsches Museum von Meisterwerken der Naturwissenschaft und Technik (English: German Museum of Masterpieces of Science and Technology)) in Munich, Germany, is the world's largest museum of science and technology, with about 125,000 exhibited objects from 50 fields of science and technology. [1]
The use of such elements brings the character of an adventure park to a museum setting. The museum seeks to address a target audience of families with children. Whilst placing interactivity and fun in the foreground, its stated aim is to engage with central aspects of German history in an academically rigorous manner. [9] [1] [5]
The museum is located on the site of the former Freilassing locomotive shed which belongs to the Deutsche Bahn AG and houses part of the Deutsches Museum's railway collection. The second part of the collection is in the transport centre of the Deutsches Museum on the Theresienhöhe in Munich. Modell des Ringlokschuppens Freilassing
Deutsches Museum. Peenemünde – A place where the Germans developed some of the world's first rockets before and during WW2. Marie Curie Museum– History of radioactivity; Auto & Technik Museum in Sinsheim, Baden-Württemberg (southwestern Germany). Has interesting displays of many vintage and historic cars, motorcycles, other machinery, and ...
Stadtmuseum Fembohaus (City Museum at Fembo House) Science and nature museums. DB-Museum (DB Railway Museum) Deutsches Museum Nürnberg (Future Museum) Museum Industriekultur (Museum of Industrial Culture) Museum für Kommunikation (Museum of Communications) Naturhistorisches Museum Nürnberg (Natural History Museum Nuremberg)
The original hemispheres are on display in the Deutsches Museum in Munich. Aside from its scientific importance, the experiment served to prove the recovery of the city of Magdeburg, which only two decades earlier had undergone the Sack of Magdeburg - considered the worst atrocity of the Thirty Years' War - when 20,000 of its inhabitants were ...
Some highlights include a Dec. 19 Kwanzaa celebration for children ages 3 to 8 at the National Museum of African American History and Culture and a Seasons of Light play at the S. Dillon Ripley ...
Together with Eicke, Rolf Zuckowski and Hans Niehaus derived a musical and audio play from the story "for children but not only for children". [3] It was first published in print by Hans Sikorski in 1998. [3] [4] It premiered at the Münchner Planetarium of the Deutsches Museum in Munich in 1999, [5] and appeared on CD in 1999, also by Sikorski ...