
View of the Kunstkammer across the Neva.
The 'Kunstkammer' or 'Kunstkamera' was the first museum in
Russia. It was established by
Peter the Great on the
Neva Riverfront facing the
Winter Palace. The turreted
Petrine Baroque building of the Kunstkamera was completed by
1727.
Peter's museum was dedicated to preserving "
natural and human curiosities and rarities". The tsar's personal collection, originally stored in the
Summer Palace, features a large assortment of human and animal
fetuses with anatomical deficiencies, which Peter bought from the Dutch anatomist
Frederick Ruysch and pharmacologist
Albertus Seba. Some of the most gruesome exhibits are the heads of
Catherine I's lover
Willem Mons and his sister
Anna Mons, still preserved in alcohol.
In
1716 Peter established the mineral cabinet of Kunstkamera, depositing there a collection of 1195 minerals which he had bought from Gotvald, a
Danzig (
Gdańsk) doctor. The collection was enriched with Russian minerals and opened for public view in
1719. It was a predecessor of the
Fersman Mineralogical Museum, now based in Moscow.
In the 1830s, the Kunstkamera collections were dispersed to newly established imperial museums, the most important being the
Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, established in 1879, with a collection approaching 2,000,000 items. The museum is still housed in the Kunstkamera and bears the name of
Peter the Great since 1903.
See also
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Globe of Gottorf (one of the museum's main artistic pieces)
External links
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Official website of the Kunstkamera