Landesmuseum Württemberg

Old Castle in Stuttgart, museum main building

The Landesmuseum Württemberg (Württemberg State Museum) is the main historical museum of the Württemberg part of the German state of Baden-Württemberg. It emerged from the 16th-century “Kunstkammer” (Cabinet of art and curiosities) of the dukes, later kings, of Württemberg who resided in Stuttgart. As a museum it was founded in 1862 by King William I.

Ducal granary: musical instruments collection

Collections in Stuttgart and Waldenbuch

The museum's main location is the Old Castle in Stuttgart. The nearby granary and the cellar of the New Castle also contain parts of the collections as well as Waldenbuch Castle outside of Stuttgart.

The collections are grouped into eight divisions:

Apart from these collections the museum regularly features special exhibitions.

The museum presents a whole range of archeological treasures and a notable collection of medieval art. It also includes the inventories of the former army and manufacturing museums. Some of the most valuable possessions of the museum were already acquired by the dukes for their art chamber: two of only four preserved Aztec feather shields from before 1521 and the oldest preserved card game, about 1430, richly decorated and expensive already at the time of production. Exhibits of local origin include a celestial globe of 1493 by Johannes Stöffler, an 11-digit mechanical calculator of 1774 by Philipp Matthäus Hahn (the first to build functional calculators to Gottfried Leibniz' design for all four arithmetic operations), and, probably the museum's most symbolic exhibit despite being similar to other ones: the royal Württemberg crown of 1797.

Further Collections

Urach Castle: sleighs of state

The museum today has a further seven branches throughout Württemberg referring to special topics:

Several other former branches now belong to the separate Baden-Württemberg State Archeological Museum (Archäologisches Landesmuseum Baden-Württemberg), which has been founded in 1990 due to the ever increasing findings of archeological heritage in the state.

Selected exhibits of Landesmuseum Württemberg

Stuttgart collections
Aurignacian flute, one of the eldest music instruments ever known (age: 35.000 - 40.000 year old) 
Neolithic wooden bucket, c. 3700 BC 
Celtic 'klinai', 550 BC 
Turricephalus of a 30- to 40-year-old Alamannic woman of the early 6th century 
Glass window from Alpirsbach monastery, Strassburg, c. 1160–1170 
Jesus on donkey carving used for donkey walks, late 14th century 
Maria Cleophae and Alphaeus by Tilman Riemenschneider, c. 1505–1510 
Stuttgart Kartenspiel, card game 15th century 
Aztec feather shield Meander and Sun c. 1520 
Aztec Xolotl, Mexico, 1500–1520 
Württemberg Crown, 1797 with later modifications 

Coordinates: 48°46′37″N 9°10′44″E / 48.777°N 9.179°E / 48.777; 9.179

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.