Museum of Industry and Agriculture

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Museum of Industry and Agriculture, on Warsaw's Krakowskie Przedmieście

The Museum of Industry and Agriculture (Polish: Muzeum Przemysłu i Rolnictwa) is a former museum of technology and agriculture at 66, Krakowskie Przedmieście in Warsaw, Poland.

History

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It was founded in 1866 on the initiative of Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski and was chartered on June 5 1875. Among its notable co-founders were philanthropists count Feliks Sobański, Józef Zamoyski, Karol Dittrich and Hipolit Wawelberg, the Polish-Jewish banker.[1] From 1881 it was located on Krakowskie Przedmieście in a former guardhouse and Bernardine monastery. It contained archives of the history of Polish industry, agriculture and crafts.[2] It ran temporary exhibitions and opened permanently to the public in 1905 but was destroyed in 1939 during World War II.

It housed a physics laboratory run by Józef Boguski where the future double Nobel laureate, Marie Curie, began her scientific career in 1890–91.[3]

After World War II, the work of the Museum was divided among three other institutions:

Notes

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  1. ^ Koperska T., Łukomska E., Bibliografia do dziejów Muzeum Przemysłu i Rolnictwa za l. 1875–1939
  2. ^ E. Chwalewik, Zbiory polskie w ojczyźnie i na obczyźnie... (Polish Collections in Poland and Abroad...), vol. 2, Warsaw, 1927, pp. 353–56.
  3. ^ Turystyki, Stołeczne Biuro. "Warszawa śladami Marii Skłodowskiej-Curie | WarsawTour - Oficjalny portal turystyczny m.st. Warszawy". sklodowska.um.warszawa.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2018-03-20.

52°14′45″N 21°0′51″E / 52.24583°N 21.01417°E / 52.24583; 21.01417



Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_Industry_and_Agriculture
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