Deutsches Museum

Deutsches Museum

Deutsches Museum with Boschbridge

Deutsches Museum with Boschbridge
Established June 28, 1903 (1903-06-28)
Location
  • Museumsinsel 1
  • 80538 München
  • Germany
Coordinates 48°07′48″N 11°35′00″E / 48.13000°N 11.58333°E / 48.13000; 11.58333Coordinates: 48°07′48″N 11°35′00″E / 48.13000°N 11.58333°E / 48.13000; 11.58333
Type
Collection size 28,000
Visitors 1.5 million
Website Deutsches Museum

The Deutsches Museum (German Museum) (or das Deutsche Museum[note 1]) in Munich, Germany is the world's largest museum of science and technology,[1] with approximately 1.5 million visitors per year and about 28,000 exhibited objects from 50 fields of science and technology.

The museum was founded on June 28, 1903, at a meeting of the Association of German Engineers (VDI) as an initiative of Oskar von Miller. Its official name is Deutsches Museum von Meisterwerken der Naturwissenschaft und Technik (English: German Museum of Masterpieces of Science and Technology). It is the largest museum in Munich.

Museumsinsel

Deutsches Museum, view of the museum island

The main site of the Deutsches Museum is a small island in the Isar river, which had been used for rafting wood since the Middle Ages. The island did not have any buildings before 1772 because it was regularly flooded prior to the building of the Sylvensteinspeicher.

Deutsches Museum as seen from Ludwigsbrücke

In 1772 the Isar barracks were built on the island and, after the flooding of 1899, the buildings were rebuilt with flood protection. In 1903 the city council announced that they would donate the island for the newly built Deutsches Museum. The island formerly known as Kohleninsel (coal island) was then renamed Museumsinsel (museum island de). [2][3]

Other sites

In addition to the main site on the Museumsinsel, the museum has two branches in and near Munich and one in Bonn.

The Flugwerft Schleißheim branch is located some 18 kilometres north of Munich's city centre close to Schleißheim Palace. It is based on the premises of one of the first military airbases in Germany founded just before World War I. It comprises the old air control and command centre as well as modern buildings added in the late 2000s after strong endorsement from Franz-Josef Strauss, the then prime minister of the state of Bavaria, who was a passionate flyer.

Deutsches Museum Bonn

The Flugwerft Schleißheim displays various interesting airplanes for which there was insufficient room at the Museumsinsel site in downtown Munich. Among the more prominent exhibits is a Horten flying wing glider built in the 1940s, restored from the few surviving parts. A collection of the German constructions of VTOL (vertical take off and landing) planes developed in the 1950s and 1960s is unique. A range of Vietnam era fighter planes as well as Russian planes taken over from East Germany after the reunification are on display. This outstation also features a workshop dedicated to the restoration of all types of airplanes intended for static display.

The latest branch of the Deutsches Museum, located at Theresienhöhe in Munich, opened in 2003 and is called the Deutsches Museum Verkehrszentrum and is focused on transportation technology.

The branch located in Bonn was opened in 1995 and focuses on German technology, science and research after 1945.

Oskar von Miller

Oskar von Miller

Oskar von Miller studied electrical engineering and is otherwise known for building the first high voltage line from Miesbach to Munich (57 km) in 1882 for the electrical technology exhibition at the Glaspalast in Munich. In 1883 he joined AEG and founded an engineering office in Munich. The Frankfurt electricity exhibition in 1891 and several power plants contributed to the reputation of Oskar von Miller. In the early years, the exhibition and the collection of the Deutsches Museum were strongly influenced personally by Oskar von Miller.

History

A few months before the 1903 meeting of the Society of German Engineers, Oskar von Miller gathered a small group who supported his desire to found a science and technology museum. In a showing of support this group spontaneously donated 260,000 marks to the cause and elected a "Provisional Committee" to get the ball rolling.

Model train set with many of Europe's rail types

In June 1903, Prince Ludwig agreed to act as patron of the museum and the city of Munich donated Coal Island as a site for the project. In addition, exhibits began to arrive from Munich, Germany, and abroad including collections from the Bavarian Academy. As no dedicated museum building existed, the exhibits were displayed in the National Museum.

On November 12, 1906, the temporary exhibits at the National Museum were ceremonially opened to the public and on November 13 the foundation stone was laid for the permanent museum.

The first name of the museum, the "German Museum for Masterpieces of Natural Science and Technology", was not meant to limit the museum to German advances in science and technology, but to express the importance of science and technology to the German people.

Oskar von Miller opened the new museum on his 70th birthday, 2 May 1925, after a delay of almost ten years. From the beginning, the museum displays are backed up by documents available in a public library and archives, which are open seven days a week to ensure access to the working public.

Clean white lines of the museum's winding staircase

Before and during World War II the museum was put on a shoestring budget by the Nazi party and many exhibits were allowed to get out of date with a few exceptions such as the new automobile room dedicated 7 May 1937. By the end of 1944 the museum was badly damaged by air bombings with 80% of the buildings and 20% of the exhibits damaged or destroyed. As Allied troops marched into Munich in April 1945, museum director, Karl Bässler, barely managed to keep the last standing bridge to Museum Island from being blown up by retreating German troops.

Following the war the museum had to be closed for repairs and temporary tenants, such as the College of Technology and the Post Office used museum space as their own buildings were being reconstructed. The Museum was also home to the Central Committee of the Liberated Jews, representing Jewish displaced persons in the American Zone of Germany after the war.

In November 1945, the library was able to reopen, followed by the congress hall in January 1946. A special exhibit on fifty years of the Diesel engine opened in October 1947 and the regular exhibits began reopening in May 1948. Not until 1965, more than twenty years after the end of the war in Germany, did the exhibit area match (and then exceed) pre-war size.

During the 1950s, the museum focused on natural sciences rather than technology and many of the traditional large exhibits, such as civil engineering, were reduced in size to make way for more modern technological advances.

Reproduction of cave of Altamira in Deutsches Museum.

In August 1969, the Apollo 8 space capsule was shown in a special exhibit entitled "Man and Space" and in 1970 the first full-time director, Theo Stillger, was appointed. In the 1970s the mission statement of the museum was modified to encourage the explanation of the cultural significance of science and technology in exhibits.

The early 1980s saw severe damage to several exhibits due to arson resulting in the smallest exhibit space of 34,140 square meters. This was followed by an extensive reconstruction effort and additional building bringing the total exhibit space to 55,000 square meters by 1993. The 1980s and '90s also brought agreements with the Science Centre in Bonn and the government resulting in the creation of Deutsches Museum Bonn and the Flugwerft Schleißheim airfield exhibit.

Glass Fowl from glass section of museum souvenir shop

In 1996, the Bavarian Government gave buildings at the historic Theresienhöhe site in Munich to the Deutsches Museum resulting in the creation of the new transportation museum, the Deutsches Museum Verkehrszentrum, which opened in 2003 and now houses the road vehicle and train exhibits that were removed from the original Deutsches Museum site. The Theresienhöhe quarter is a new area on the edge of the inner city of Munich, and the Museum of Transport is a part of the quarter's design of mixed use.

Chronology

Current permanent exhibits

  • Aerospace
  • Agriculture
  • Altamira Cave, reproduction of a Spanish cave with stone-age paintings
  • Amateur Radio
  • Astronautics
  • Astronomy
  • Bridge Building
  • Ceramics
  • Chemistry
  • Chronometry
  • Computers
  • Digital Imaging (under construction as of 2006)
  • Electrical Power
  • Energy Technology
  • Environment
  • Geodesy
  • Glass
  • History of the Deutsches Museum
  • Hydraulic Engineering
  • Machine Components

  • Machine Tools
  • Marine Navigation
  • Masterpieces
  • Mining (Historical and Modern)
  • Metallurgy
  • Microelectronics
  • Mineral Oil and Natural Gas
  • Music
  • Paper
  • Pharmacy
  • Physics
  • Power Machinery
  • Printing
  • Scientific Instruments
  • Technical Toys
  • Telecommunications
  • Textile Technology
  • Tunnel Construction
  • Weights and Measures

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. The English language expression "the Deutsches Museum" is a troublesome translation, because it uses a declension that is grammatically inappropriate in both English (which normally lacks such declensions) and German (which would use a different declension). In German, the adjective deutsch, if preceded by the neutral definite article "das" (one of the equivalents of the English language word "the"), is declined by the addition of the suffix "e", and not the suffix "es", which is used only if the definite article is omitted (i.e. das Deutsche Museum or Deutsches Museum, but not das Deutsches Museum). However, the English language expression "the Deutsches Museum" is so commonly used, including by the Museum itself, that it is long accepted as the conventional English translation of das Deutsche Museum.

Notes

  1. "The New York Times Travel Guide dated 10 Aug 2008 states that "this is the largest technological museum of its kind in the world."". Travel.nytimes.com. Archived from the original on May 3, 2012. Retrieved 2011-11-27.
  2. Pudor, Heinrich (1918). "Zur Geschichte der technischen Museen - Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte". 14 (2/3): 356–375. JSTOR 20725016.
  3. Bühler, Dirk (May 2009). Building a Masterpiece of Concrete-Technology: The Deutsches Museum in Munich (1906-1911). Proceedings of the Third International Congress on Construction History. Cottbus.

Bibliography

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