Berlin: The 10 most interesting museums you should visit in this city
Do you have any idea how many museums there are currently in Berlin, the capital of Germany? More than 200. And the best thing about them is that they exist in every subject you can imagine.
There are both public and private exhibition spaces, some of which may be dedicated to science, history or technology.
All these museums make Berlin a city that many people want to visit.
There are many reasons why you should make a plan to get on a flight to this city. You can’t miss the best museums in the world in Berlin.
Due to the great amount of wonderful museums that exist in this great city, we will leave a detailed list of the 10 most interesting museums in Berlin, the main reason why a flight to Berlin is an excellent idea.
The 10 Best Museums in Berlin
1. Neues Museum (New Museum)
This museum was built in the nineteenth century by one of the most famous and prolific architects of Berlin, Friedrich August Stüler, the New Museum (“Neues Museum”) was completely destroyed during World War II and continued in ruins under the GDR regime before being restored and reopened by British architect David Chipperfield in 1999.
This piece, created in 1345 BC, is one of the most reproduced pieces of Egyptian art of all time and a true symbol of beauty.
2. Berlin Wall Memorial
This great museum explains how and why the Berlin Wall was built through a collection of images of its construction.
From its observation platform you can see a section of the Wall as it was then, with its famous “Death Strip” and its watchtowers.
It is undoubtedly one of the most moving museums in Berlin and helps those who did not experience first-hand the horror of those years to understand the real impact the Wall had on the lives of the citizens.
3. Pergamon Museum
In the great city of Berlin, the Pergamon Museum is one of the most visited buildings by tourists.
It is a very famous and recognized museum and this has a very specific reason: it is due to the fact that inside this museum there are great reconstructions of archaeological excavations that include a copy of the Pergamon Altar, the Miletus Market Gate, the Mschatta façade, and the Ishtar Gate and the Babylonian Processional Way.
4. Natural History Museum
This great building is more than a museum. This is because it is also a research center dedicated to the study of life that allows a constant renewal of the collection and where the most recent and important discoveries are made known.
The exhibition consists of 30 million objects, a figure that continues to grow – more are added now as you read this – in areas such as zoology, palaeontology, geology and mineralogy.
5. Topography of terror
This free museum in Berlin revolves around the horrible crimes that Hitler’s SS committed throughout Europe, with photographs and texts as well as audio and video recordings.
It is located in the former headquarters of this organization. In fact, it achieves the purpose of any good museum: to reflect on existence itself.
6. Hamburger Bahnhof
This is the main contemporary art museum of the city and is among the best art museums in Berlin.
It has an incredible and large collection of works by artists such as Beuys, Warhol or Twombly. The permanent collection is complemented by temporary exhibitions of emerging artists and more established talents.
7. Bauhaus Archiv – Museum of Design Berlin
In this museum you will find the largest Bauhaus collection in existence, offering an in-depth introduction to the German avant-garde school and its impact on design, art and architecture around the world.
The museum is housed in a building designed by Walter Gropius, who was the founder of the Bauhaus school, and displays a fascinating collection of ceramics, furniture, and sculpture, weaving, printing and binding, all handmade by Bauhaus teachers and students.
8. Gemaeldegalerie
Is an art gallery that has one of the best collections of European art in the world dating from the 13th to the 18th century.
It has nearly 3000 paintings, among which you can find masterpieces by Bruegel, Dürer, Raphael, Titian, Vermeer, Caravaggio, Rembrandt and Rubens.
9. Former National Gallery
It is located in a magnificent neoclassical building that was inaugurated in 1876.
It basically houses 19th century painting and sculpture art.
In it there are the works of the famous Berlin painter Adolph Menzel, in addition to others of different German painters of great level like Max Lieberman, Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Caspar David Friedrich and Carl Blechen.
10. Altes Museum (Old Museum)
Located in an emblematic neoclassical building completed in 1830, the “Altes Museum” or Ancient Museum houses the city’s most important collection of classical antiquities, including works from Ancient Greece and the Roman Empire and one of the largest collections of Etruscan art outside Italy.
Let yourself be surprised by its bronzes, urns, statues, ceramics, ivory carvings, precious stones, vases and other crafts of great cultural value.