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The museum extends to over 100,000 m 2, [1] and contains 123 authentic peasant settlements, 363 monuments and over 50,000 artefacts from around Romania. [2] Structures in the museum ranged from the 17th to the 20th century, representative of different ethnographic regions including Banat, Transylvania, Moldavia, Maramures, Oltenia, Dobrogea ...
The most important museum of history and archeology in Romania, both by size (developed area) and by heritage Grigore Antipa National Museum of Natural History: Șoseaua Pavel D. Kiseleff 1: Natural history: The museum's collection consists of over 2 million pieces, grouped into different collections zoology, paleontology, minerals, rocks
The National Museum of Art of Romania (Romanian: Muzeul Național de Artă al României) is located in the Royal Palace in Revolution Square, central Bucharest. [1] It features collections of medieval and modern Romanian art , as well as the international collection assembled by the Romanian royal family .
On 25 January 2025, the Helmet of Coțofenești, a Geto-Dacian helmet that was loaned by the museum to the Drents Museum in Assen, the Netherlands, was stolen along with three other loaned gold artifacts following a heist and remains missing. [4] Following the theft, the loan agreement was met with criticism in Romania. [5]
The National Museum of Contemporary Art (Romanian: Muzeul Național de Artă Contemporană, or MNAC) is a contemporary art museum in Bucharest, Romania. The museum is located in a new glass wing of the Palace of the Parliament , one of the largest administrative buildings in the world.
The Royal Palace with the equestrian statue of king Carol I in front The Golescu mansion in 1866 The Golescu mansion around the start of the 20th century The old Royal Palace as it appeared before 1926 showing the main wing added to the Golesecu mansion The Royal Palace from the air during Communist times, with the multipurpose hall 'Sala Palatului' behind The Royal Palace today as National ...
The Zambaccian Museum in Bucharest, Romania is a museum in the former home of Krikor Zambaccian (1889 –1962), a businessman and art collector. The museum was founded in the Dorobanți neighbourhood in 1947, closed by the Nicolae Ceaușescu regime in 1977, and re-opened in 1992. It is now a branch of The National Museum of Art of Romania.
In 1991 the palace became the headquarters of the Romanian Presidency and the old wing of the ensemble was opened to the public as Cotroceni National Museum, envisioned as an insight into past ages. Many of the palace's function rooms were decorated to the taste of Marie, the English wife of Carol's heir, his nephew Crown Prince Ferdinand.