Founded on Antiquity – Berlin’s First Museum

Thursday, 10. July 2025 — Wednesday, 6. May 2026
View to Berlin Lustgarten and the Königliche Museum (today Altes Museum); Carl Daniel Freydanck, Das alte Museum in Berlin, 1836, SPSG - Photographer: Anders, Jörg P.; 1987
View to Berlin Lustgarten and the Königliche Museum (today Altes Museum); Carl Daniel Freydanck, Das alte Museum in Berlin, 1836, SPSG - Photographer: Anders, Jörg P.; 1987

For many visitors to Berlin, touring the city’s Museumsinsel (Museum Island) is an essential part of their itinerary. After opening in 1830, the then-Royal Museum quickly became a major attraction. However, the experience of visiting a museum was very different at that time. The special exhibition on the Altes Museum’s upper floor provides fascinating insights into the museum’s beginnings. It shows a selection of antiquities displayed in its first permanent exhibition in 1830. The cornerstone for the museum designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in Berlin’s Lustgarten was laid on 9 July 1825. Just five years later, on 3 August 1830, the first public museum in Berlin and Prussia opened its doors. The Altes Museum quickly developed into a popular destination and has remained an important institution for basic research in archaeology. The exhibition sheds light not only on the structural challenges faced by Schinkel and his innovative solutions but also on the contemporary societal context and the very different appearance at the time of the exhibition rooms, which were severely damaged during the Second World War. …”


More exhibitions: November 2025 | December 2025 | January 2026