4 Answers

  1. This is a difficult question – since no two museums are the same, each one is unusual in its own way.

    In my personal top three, I would include the Museum of Broken Relationships (or the Museum of Broken Hearts) in Zagreb, which, despite its external simplicity, touches the feelings of any visitor.

    The Warsaw Uprising Museum made a very strong impression. This is probably the first time that museums have shown war in its most diverse forms.

    Last of all, I will add the Maritime Museum in Tallinn, which created a completely surreal three-dimensional map.

    exhibition in the former seaplane hangar.

  2. The Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg in the summer of 1991, a week before the Coup… I was taking an archaeology course in the summer session and got a ticket to the Scythian mounds. And in August I come to St. Petersburg and in the Hermitage I see collections of objects from these very mounds, which I told you about during the exam. And damn right up to goosebumps!!! I was very impressed…

  3. During my stay at the monastery, I repeatedly had to visit other monasteries on missions. So are the temples, which are mostly abandoned. Amazing experience. Amen to that!

  4. Museum “Lights of Moscow”. At the entrance, they give you a remote control that you can use to light lanterns from different centuries in the museum halls. You walk, watch, light and extinguish lanterns at your own discretion 🙂

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