Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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]
Museum Tuscherschloss und Hirsvogelsaal (Museum Tucher Mansion and Hirsvogel Hall) Spielzeugmuseum Nürnberg (Nuremberg Toy Museum) 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)
The museum creates a multi-sensory experience by incorporating odours, soundscapes and other stimuli. This involves various elements such as floorboards in a medieval castle that creak when walked upon, the reproduction of a forest, the smell of gas in a reproduction World War I trench, a brightly-lit shopping arcade from the “roaring ...
The Deutsches Museum Bonn is a museum with exhibits and experiments of famous scientists, engineers and inventors. [1] Its central themes are research and technology in Germany after 1945. It is part of the Deutsches Museum in Munich.
Considered the "German equivalent" of the British Museum, [1] the Humboldt Forum houses the non-European collections of the Berlin State Museums, temporary exhibitions and public events. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic , it opened digitally on 16 December 2020 and became accessible to the general public on 20 July 2021.
The Alte Pinakothek was the largest museum in the world and structurally and conceptually well advanced through the convenient accommodation of skylights for the cabinets. [4] Even the Neo-Renaissance exterior of the Pinakothek clearly stands out from the castle-like museum type common in the early 19th century. It is closely associated with ...
Thus the name of the museum maintained the idea of a close cultural relationship within a region defined by the common German language, and a shared German cultural tradition. In 1852, the museum's intention to document the cultural unity of the German-speaking areas was a progressive concept, free from any exaggerated chauvinism. [1]
The Museum Lichtspiele (German: [muˈzeːʊm ˈlɪçtˌʃpiːlə]) is a movie theater in Munich, Germany. It is situated in the district Au next to the Deutsches Museum and along the Isar bank. Established in 1910, it is Munich's oldest still operational movie theater and known for showing English-language blockbusters and art movies , as well ...