Split Archaeological Museum

The Split Archaeological Museum is the oldest museum in Croatia, established in 1820 by a decree of the Dalmatian government in Zadar.[1] Some 150,000 artifacts cover prehistoric times, the period of Greek colonization of the Adriatic, Roman Provincial and Early Christian era to the early Middle Ages and the period of Croatian popular rulers. There is a collection of stone inscriptions from Salona and the collections of Graeco-Hellenistic ceramic objects, Roman glass, ancient clay lamps, bone, and metal articles, gems and coins.

Split Archaeological Museum
Split Archaeological Museum
Split Archaeological Museum is located in Croatia
Split Archaeological Museum
Location within Croatia
Established1820
LocationZrinsko-Frankopanska 25, Split, Croatia
Coordinates43°30′56″N 16°26′4″E / 43.51556°N 16.43444°E / 43.51556; 16.43444
TypeArchaeological museum
Key holdingsGreek colonization of the Adriatic, Roman Provincial and Early Christian era to the early Middle Ages.
Collection size150,000
Websitehttp://www.mdc.hr/split-arheoloski/nj/index.html Museum

The museum is housed at Zrinsko-Frankopanska 25 in Split. There is also a branch building in Solin (Salona and Tusculum ) and two regional centres at Vid near Metković (Narona Collection), and on the island of Vis.[1]

The museum complex consists of a two-story main building, with the exhibition halls on the ground floor and the museum library and study rooms on the 1st floor. A row of arcades surrounding the main building house the lapidarium, and there is an attached garden.

History

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At the beginning of the 16th century, the Split humanist Dominik Papalic brought together a collection of ancient writing and picture tablets in his house, which he and poet Marko Marulić had found in the ruins of ancient Solin (Salona). In 1750 Papalic founded a museum.[1]

The Split Archaeological Museum was founded in 1820 by the decree of the Dalmatian government in Zadar after a visit of Emperor Francis I to Dalmatia in 1818.[1] The original museum building was erected in 1821 next to the eastern walls of Diocletian's Palace but this soon became too small to house the growing number of artifacts.[1]

The Catholic priest, archaeologist, and historical researcher Frane Bulić was the museum director starting from 1884 for more than fifty years.[1] He founded the first Croatian archaeological society in 1894 and developed the building of the second museum building from 1912 to 1914.[1] The new building was built according to the plans of the Viennese architects, August Kirstein and Friedrich Ohmann in the neo-Romanesque style.[1][2] The First World War delayed the opening of the new museum building, and the government only opened it to the public in early 1922.[1]

Exhibits

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Roman Art Exhibition

The exhibits are mainly based on Split and Salona finds.

A central part of the museum is a collection of stone inscriptions from Salona and Graeco-Hellenistic ceramic objects, Roman glass, ancient clay lamps, bone and metal articles, gems, medieval coins and an underwater archaeological collection.[1]

Research

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The museum does archaeological research in Salona, Issa, and Narona. The museum has two other collections in Vid near Metković and on the island of Vis.[1]

Since 1878, the Museum has published the first archaeological journal, entitled Bullettino di archeologia e storia dalmata ( Journal of Dalmatian Archeology and History ).[2]

Collections

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The collections cover the entire history of Dalmatia from prehistory to the early Middle Ages. The museum also has an extensive collection of over 70,000 ancient and medieval coins and significant library and archive holdings.

The museum has eight collections:

Other reading

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  • Željko Rapanić, Zdenko Vinski et al. .: Archaeological Museum Split, Archaeological Museum in Split, Split 1990.
  • Dietrich Höllhuber: Croatian Adriatic Coast , DuMont Reiseverlag, Cologne 2009.
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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Arheološki muzej" [Archaeological Museum] (in Croatian). Archived from the original on 5 September 2010. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
  2. ^ a b Alduk, Sara. "Split Archeology Museum Marks Its 200th Anniversary". Archived from the original on 20 August 2021. Retrieved 4 June 2022.