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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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Oceanographic Museum Of Monaco

The Oceanographic Museum (Musée océanographique) is a museum of marine sciences in Monaco-Ville, Monaco. This building is part of the Institut océanographique, which is committed to sharing its knowledge of the oceans.

History

The Oceanographic Museum was inaugurated in 1910 by Monaco's modernist reformer Prince Albert I, who invited to the celebrations not just high officials and celebrities but also the world-leading oceanographers of the day to develop the concept of a future Mediterranean Commission dedicated to oceanography, now called Mediterranean Science Commission. Jacques-Yves Cousteau was director from 1957 to 1988. The Museum celebrated its centenary in March 2010, after extensive renovations.

Overview

The museum is home to exhibitions and collections of various species of sea fauna (starfish, seahorses, turtles, jellyfish, crabs, lobsters, rays, sharks, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, eels, cuttlefish etc.). The museum's holdings also include a great variety of sea related objects, including model ships, sea animal skeletons, tools, weapons etc., as well as a collection of material culture and ritual objects made from, or integrating materials such as pearls, molluscs and nacre.

At the first floor, A Sailor’s Career showcases the work of Prince Albert I. It includes the laboratory from L’Hirondelle, the first of Prince Albert's research yachts. Observations made there led to an understanding of the phenomenon of anaphylaxis, for which Dr Charles Richet received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1913.

An aquarium in the basement of the museum presents a wide array of flora and fauna. Four thousand species of fish and over 200 families of invertebrates can be seen. The aquarium also features a presentation of Mediterranean and tropical marine ecosystems.

Numerous artists display their artworks in the museum, such as Damien Hirst and Philippe Pasqua.

Architecture

This monumental example of highly charged Baroque Revival architecture has an impressive façade above the sea, towering over the sheer cliff face to a height of 279 feet (85.04 m). It took eleven years to build, using 100,000 tons of stone from La Turbie. During construction, the names of twenty well-known oceanographic research vessels personally selected by Prince Albert I were inscribed into the frieze of the museum's façade.

Oceanographic research vessels inscribed on façade

Country Vessel Image Year Launched Expedition Inscription
 German Empire SMS Gazelle 1859 1874–76 GAZELLE
 United Kingdom HMS Investigator 1801 1801–03 INVESTIGATOR
 Austrian Empire SMS Novara 1850 Novara Expedition (1857–59) NOVARA
 Russian Empire Vitiaz 1862 1870–74

1883–85

VITIAZ
 Belgium RV Belgica 1884 Belgian Antarctic Expedition (1897–99) BELGICA
 France Talisman 1883 TALISMAN
 German Empire SS Valdivia
1886 Valdivia Expedition (1898–99) VALDIVIA
 Kingdom of Italy Washington 1881 WASHINGTON
 Sweden( United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway) SS Vega
1872 1878–79 VEGA
 Norway( United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway) Fram 1892 Nansen's Fram expedition (1893–96)

Sverdrup's Canadian Arctic islands expedition (1898–1902)

Amundsen's South Pole expedition (1910–12)

FRAM
 Monaco Princess Alice PRINCESS ALICE
 Monaco Hirondelle HIRONDELLE
 Austria-Hungary SMS Pola Austro-Hungarian Deep Sea Expeditions [de] (1890–93) POLA
 United States USC&GS George S. Blake 1874 1874–1904 BLAKE
 United Kingdom HMS Challenger 1858 Challenger expedition (1872–76) CHALLENGER
 Netherlands HNLMS Siboga Siboga expedition (1899–1900) SIBOGA
 United Kingdom Buccaneer BUCCANEER
 Kingdom of Portugal SS Amélia I [pt], II [pt], III, IV 1896, 1897, 1899, 1901–1910 AMELIA
 Denmark Ingolf 1895–96 INGOLF
 United States USS Albatross 1882 1883–97, 1899–1916, 1919–21 ALBATROSS

Caulerpa taxifolia

In 1989, a French marine biologist discovered a patch of a giant, tropical seaweed Caulerpa taxifolia directly under the walls of the museum. The actual source and extent of this exotic introduction remain a matter of controversy.

Gallery

See also