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The Museum of Natural Sciences (French: Muséum des Sciences naturelles, pronounced [myzeɔm de sjɑ̃s natyʁɛl]; Dutch: Museum voor Natuurwetenschappen, pronounced [myˈzeːjʏɱ voːr naːˈtyːrˌʋeːtə(n)sxɑpə(n)]) is a Brussels museum dedicated to natural history. [2]
Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences: City of Brussels: Nature: Natural history museum with a notable collection of dinosaur skeletons Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History: City of Brussels: History - Military: Displays of Belgian military history, aircraft, armour and other arms and military vehicles Schaerbeek Museum ...
BELvue Museum; Horta Museum; Magritte Museum; Musical Instrument Museum; Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and of Military History; Royal Museums of Art and History; Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium; Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences
Magritte Museum; Marc Sleen Museum; MigratieMuseumMigration; Millennium Iconoclast Museum of Art; Schaerbeek Beer Museum; Museum of Europe; Museum of Ixelles; Museum of Natural Sciences; Museum of the National Bank of Belgium; Museums of the Far East; Musical Instrument Museum, Brussels
Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels; Technopolis, Mechelen; Bulgaria ... National Museum of Natural History and Science, Lisbon, Lisbon;
View of Brussels with the Nassau Palace on the left From this time comes a testimony from the French traveler Pierre Bergeron. He was in Brussels in 1612 and remembered, in his unpublished manuscript Itinéraire germano-belgique , especially the ubiquitous slogans in the palace: the proud Ce sera moy Nassau and the actual motto, a sailing ship ...
The museum is situated on the north side of the square, opposite Brussels' Town Hall, in the Maison du Roi ("King's House") or Broodhuis ("Bread House" or "Bread Hall"). [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] This building, erected between 1504 and 1536, was rebuilt in the 19th century in its current neo-Gothic style by the architect Victor Jamaer [ fr ] .
The museum was founded on 1 September 1801 by Napoleon [1] [2] and opened in 1803 as the Museum of Fine Arts of Brussels (French: Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bruxelles, Dutch: Museum voor Schone Kunsten van Brussel), occupying fourteen rooms of the former Palace of Charles of Lorraine, known as the "Old Court".