46°46′09″N 23°35′12″E / 46.7692686°N 23.5865425°E The Ethnographic Museum of Transylvania (Romanian: Muzeul Etnografic al Transilvaniei; Hungarian: Erdélyi néprajzi múzeum) is situated in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. With a history of almost 100 years, the Ethnographic Museum of Transylvania is one of the first and greatest of its kind in Romania. It has two exhibition sections, one of which is to be found in downtown Reduta Palace (21, Memorandumului Street), while the other exhibition section is the open-air Romulus Vuia Park situated on the city's north-west side, in Hoia Forest.
History
editThe museum was founded on 16 June 1922.
Collection
editThe museum has a collection of more than 50,000 objects reflecting the occupations, the habits and the life style of the Transylvanian rural population. Part of this collection is to be found in the Reduta Palace while the rest of the objects are in the open-air section.
Reduta Palace
editThe collection here presented is a representative selection of the items and clothes used in rural everyday life. Besides, Reduta Palace also houses a collection of some 50,000 photographs and some 5,000 diapositives. The library of the museum has some 12,000 scholarly journals and specialized magazines.
The Ethnographic Park "Romulus Vuia"
editThe Ethnographic Park "Romulus Vuia" is the open-air section of the museum. It opened to the public on 12 April 1929, as the first open-air museum in Romania.
The most ancient objects here exhibited date from 1678. The park's main collection is composed of:
- 13 traditional farms with some 90 buildings collected from several transylvanian ethnographical regions: Ţara Moţilor, Ţara Năsăudului, Bistriţa, Câmpia Transilvaniei, Maramureş, Székely Land, Ţara Zarandului, Podgoria Albă, Oaş Country, Gurghiu, Ţara Călatei, Bran
- 34 rural technical installations
- 5 workshops
- 3 wooden churches
- a wooden carved cemetery gate.
Gallery
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Door of Cizer church
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Interior of Cizer church
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Petrindu church in Romulus Vuia park
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Interior door of Petrindu church
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Interior of Petrindu church
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Chiraleş church in Romulus Vuia park
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Interior door of Chiraleş church
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Interior of Chiraleş church
See also
editMuseums in Cluj :
External links
editBibliography
edit- Bodea Gheorghe. Clujul vechi și nou. Cluj-Napoca, 2002
- Lukács József. Povestea oraşului-comoară. Scurtă istorie a Clujului şi monumentelor sale Cluj-Napoca : Apostrof, 2005.