Lublin Museum


Lublin Museum is one of the oldest and largest museums in Eastern Poland, located in Lublin. It was created in 1914, and received its own building in 1923.

History

The history of the Lublin Museum dates back to the beginning of the 20th century, and is associated with Hieronim Łopaciński, a junior high school teacher and a correspondent of the Academy of Learning, amateur historian, ethnographer, bibliophile and lover of antiquity. Thanks to his efforts in 1901, two exhibitions were organized in Lublin. The exhibition of art and antiquities was opened on June 4th in the former Dominican Monastery. Approximately 4,000 exhibits were assembled - engravings, paintings, sculptures, decorative arts, documents, prints, manuscripts, excavated artefacts, guild artefacts, arms, coins, medals, stamps and maps. The industrial and agricultural exhibition was opened on June 22nd with ethnographic section where folk costumes, wooden products and ritual art were presented. In 1974, the premises of the Lublin Castle were adapted for the needs of the District Museum in Lublin, established in 1950. The permanent exhibitions of painting, decorative arts, armaments, archeological, ethnographic and numismatic artefacts were opened. In 1987 the museum was renamed the Lublin Museum.
It has permanent collections for: