Jump to content

Aquarium Museum, Nancy

Coordinates: 48°41′41″N 6°11′17″E / 48.6948°N 6.1881°E / 48.6948; 6.1881
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Anastasia.sch30 (talk | contribs) at 10:43, 21 July 2023 (Adding information by translating the french page). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Aquarium Museum, Nancy
Muséum-aquarium de Nancy
Map
LocationNancy, France
Coordinates48°41′41″N 6°11′17″E / 48.6948°N 6.1881°E / 48.6948; 6.1881

The Aquarium Museum of Nancy (French: Muséum-aquarium de Nancy, MAN), is a heritage establishment of scientific and technical culture jointly managed by the Métropole du Grand Nancy and the University of Lorraine.[1]

This natural history museum includes zoological and paleontological collections as well as living collections, mainly ichthyological.

The Aquarium Museum is made up of two stories. On the ground floor, there are three aquariums, the Nautilus and Calypso galeries, as well as the boat room. At the end of the Nautilus gallery, the Astrolabe gallery hosts temporary exhibits of contemporary artists. The Cuénor amphitheater is also on the ground floor. The zoologie gallery as well as two other spaces for exhibits are on the first floor.

Location

The Aquarium Musem, previously known as the Institut of Zoologie (French: Institut de Zoologie)[2] is located in the heart of Nancy, at 34, rue sainte catherine. The old botanical garden of Nancy, called the Dominique Alexandre Godron Garden (French: jardin Dominique Alexandre Godron) can be found behindthe building of the Aquarium Museum.

The closest tramway station to the museum is the station "Division de fer" on line 1 of the Nancy tramway, located 300m from the museum. Free parking is available along the East Canal, and close to the Porte Sainte Catherine.

Architecture

The building hosting the museum was built in 1933 and was designed by Jacques and Michel André. The building's architecture was notably inspired from the work of the American architect, Frank Lloyd Wright. As it is a necessary condition for the proper conservation of natural history collections, the building has a windowless façade. The building is classified as a historical monument, established in a decree from 6 December 2016.[2]

History

Origin

In 1752, Stanislas Leszczynski, Duke of Lorraine, created a Royal College of Medicine by bringing together former private regional collections. These first collections of Nancy's natural history cabinet, from which the Muséum-Aquarium was created, came from the assembly of seventeen cabinets of curiosities, often belonging to enlightened amateurs and made up of a variety of heterogeneous items such as antiquities, fossils, herbariums, naturalised animals and even old medals. In addition to its conservation activities, the college also offered courses in anatomy, botany and surgery. The collections, consisting of herbariums, minerals, fossils and representatives of various vertebrate taxa, were used for teaching purposes.

In 1798, the École Centrale de la Meurthe was created and moved, along with the natural history collections, to the building that currently hosts the Nancy municipal library. Six years later, in 1804, the Écoles Centrales were replaced by lycées, and natural science teaching was abandoned. The collections were then set aside, preserved but stored in poor conditions.

The collections continued to grow and were managed by a number of curators who were renowned naturalists, including Pierre Remy Willemet, Émile Braconnot, Charles de Haldat du Lys, Soyer-Willemet and Dominique-Alexandre Godron. It was not until 1854, the year in which Nancy's Faculty of Science was created, that the natural history department was revived.[3]

The University of Nancy was expanding rapidly and moved into the Palais de l'Université on Place Carnot in the early 1860s. The natural history collections, comprising mineralogy and geology from Lorraine, comparative anatomy, anthropology, zoology and herbariums, occupied three rooms and were regularly open to the general public.

New building

It is thanks to the action of Lucien Cuénot, director of the natural history cabinet in 1898, that the museum acquired its present form. Indeed, under his tenure, the museum's collections grew so much that it became necessary to move them. At the beginning of the 20th century, the natural history museum's collections were spread out over mutiple sites in the city: geology, mineralogy, and paleontology collections left the University Palace and were put in the old seminary, rue de Strasbourg. The botanical collections were installed near the botanical garde, 6 rue Sainte-Catherine, near the place Stanislas and the Porte Sainte Catherine.

References

  1. ^ "Muséum-Aquarium de Nancy". Amcsti (in French). Retrieved 2022-02-07.
  2. ^ a b "Ancien institut de zoologie". www.pop.culture.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  3. ^ La feuille des jeunes naturalistes : revue mensuelle d'histoire naturelle. Vol. 14. Paris: A. Dollfus. 1883.