Berlin Jewish Museum
Initially an idea of the Berliner Jewish community as
a way of recovering, the museum opened at the beginning
of the ‘30s -shortly before the ascent of Hitler
to the power- and was closed by the Gestapo in 1938. In
the ‘80 s it gained force the idea to reopen it,
thing that finally was made in January of 1999, when opened
the Libeskind building, an extension of the Berlin Museum,
designed by the architect Daniel Libeskind.
The 700,000 plus visitors who crossed their rooms in the
first year made it one of the more visited German museums.
It offers guided tours, temporary exhibitions and a varied
calendar of events, including science symposiums, concerts,
and workshops for kids and adolescents, assuring his position
like an animated center for the Jewish history and culture.
Lindenstraße
9-14,
10969
Berlin
Berlin
Bauhaus Archive / Design Museum
Museum of the Daily Culture of the 20th Century
Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin
Berlin Historical Museum
Berlin Jewish Museum
Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin
Vitra Design Museum
World Cultures House
Düsseldorf
Düsseldorf Art Museum
Goethe Museum
Frankfurt
German Museum of the Cinema
Modern Art Museum
Historical Museum
Staedel Art Institute and Municipal Gallery
Deutsche Bundesbank Money Museum
Bonn
Bonn Art Museum
Bonn University Botanical Garden
Hamburg
Hamburg History Museum
Arts and Crafts Museum
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