Musée alsacien (Strasbourg)
Folk art
CTS bus line 10, stop: Saint-Nicolas.
CTS bus lines 14 and 24, stops: Porte de l′Hôpital or Ancienne Douane
The Musée alsacien (Alsatian museum) is a museum in Strasbourg in the Bas-Rhin department of France. It opened on 11 May 1907,[1] and is dedicated to all aspects of (mostly rural) daily life in pre-industrial and early industrial Alsace. It contains over 5000 exhibits and is notable for the reconstruction of the interiors of several traditional houses.[2] It also features a rich collection of artifacts documenting the everyday life of Alsatian Jews.
The museum is located in several Renaissance timber framed houses on the Quai Saint-Nicolas, on the banks of the Ill river.[2] In 1917, it was bought by the city of Strasbourg.[citation needed]
Another, smaller, Musée alsacien exists in the city of Haguenau, 30 kilometers north of Strasbourg.
References
- ^ "Alsatian Museum". museu.ms. Retrieved 2023-05-07.
- ^ a b "Musée Alsacien, Strasbourg". Musées de Strasbourg. Archived from the original on 2011-10-01. Retrieved 2009-08-23.
Bibliography
- Le Musée Alsacien de Strasbourg, Éditions des musées de la ville de Strasbourg 2006, ISBN 2-35125-005-2
External links
- Media related to Musée alsacien de Strasbourg at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
- Gallery of Jewish artifacts from the museum's collection—(in French)
48°34′45″N 7°45′02″E / 48.57917°N 7.75056°E / 48.57917; 7.75056
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divisions
Bas-Rhin (Strasbourg) (Unterelsaß) |
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Haut-Rhin (Colmar) (Oberelsaß) |
- Coat of arms
- Flag
- Anthem
- People
- Demographics
- Kelsch
- Musée alsacien
- Hagenau
- Strasbourg
- Regional council of Alsace (1982–2015)
- Alsace independence movement
- Grand Est (since 2016)
- European Collectivity of Alsace (since 2021)
- Assembly of Alsace (since 2021)
(according to the
1801 Concordat in
Alsace–Moselle,
including Lorraine)
Catholic Church |
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Protestantism | |
Judaism |
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- Germania Superior (Pagus Alsatiae) (83–475)
- Alemanni (circa 213–496)
- Alamannia (3rd-century–911)
- Duchy of Alsace (circa 630–699)
- Prince-Bishopric of Strasbourg (982–1803)
- County of Ferrette (11th-century–14th-century)
- Salm (1165−1793)
- Landgraviate of Alsace (1186–1646)
- Further Austria (13th-century–1648)
- Décapole (1354–1679)
- County of Hanau-Lichtenberg (1456–1736)
- Upper Rhenish Circle (1500-1679)
- Left Bank of the Rhine (1814-1871)
- Imperial Territory of Alsace-Lorraine (1871–1918)
- Gau Baden-Elsaß (1940–1945)
- Alsace (1945–2016)
- Grand Est (2016–)
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