Volodymyr-Volynsky Historical Museum

History

The Volodymyr-Volynsky Historical Museum owns one of the oldest collections of Volynian antiquities. It was founded in 1887. The community of Volodymyr-Volynskyi established this Collection preserve history and promotescientific research. At the beginning of the twentieth century the Collection included such items as blackletter books, manuscripts (a sixteenth-century New Testament), icons and coins. The museum was headed by an enthusiastic regional ethnographer, nobleman O. Dvernytsky (1838–1906), the Head of St. Volodymyr Fellowship.

During World War I many items were taken to the museums of Kharkiv. In the period between World War I and World War II the museum moved to the buildings of a Dominican monastery, an architectural monument active during the 15th-18th century.

Funds

The museum collection consists of more than 18,000 items, including archeological finds, numismatic and ethnographic items, objects of arts and crafts, icons, documents, blackletter books and photographic materials.

The museum today

Museum researchers attend ethnographic conferences, archeological and ethnographic expeditions, investigate the history of Volynian land and educate local students. The museum also exhibits the works of local artists.

The museum joined the international project "Via Regia". The museum cooperates with the Vohlynian and Rivne museum, Stefanyk Library of Lviv and Zamoyski Museum (Poland).

As of 2011, the director was Vladimir Stemkovsky[1]

gollark: (including websockets)
gollark: But newish CC versions, for some weird reason, allow HTTP access without ingame peripherals.
gollark: Unfortunately, they're expensive, and have some annoying limitations.
gollark: It has "modems", for allowing computers ingame to send messages to each other.
gollark: So, you know ComputerCraft, the Minecraft mod?

References

Official website

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.