Es ist schon einige Tage her, dass der Google-News-Alert diesen Artikel empfahl - macht nichts, er liest sich heute noch genauso gut!
Wunderbarer Artikel über unser Museum auf aero.at
von Prof. Dr. Claus Schwarze aus Köln.
Vielen Dank!
Der Kaispeicher B der Hamburger HafenCity steckt bis unters Dach voller Exponate, Anekdoten und Erlebnisse - viel zu schade, sie nicht zu teilen! Deshalb gibt es ab sofort täglich eine Geschichte aus dem Maritimen Museum in Hamburg, erzählt von den Mitarbeitern.
Dieses Blog durchsuchen
Dienstag, 1. März 2011
CNN Traveller: Hamburg, European Green Capital 2011
Schön, da hat ein CNN Reporter Spaß im Internationalen Maritimen Museum gehabt!
"... Another early focal point is the International Maritime Museum on Koreastrasse, a tall, red-brick former warehouse where all things nautical are displayed on eight levels – each resembling the wooden deck of a ship.
It takes a broad-brush approach to its subject, with displays about, for example, the earliest sailors, great navigators and the world’s navies. For a modern museum, it is perhaps slightly lacking in the interactive and there could be a few too many model ships in glass cases for every visitor’s comfort.
It doesn’t help, either that a prize exhibit was recently stolen. This was the skull of the famous 15th-century Hamburg pirate Klaus Stortebeker. The outlaw’s dome, which was displayed with a large spike through it, vanished in January with various suspects on the police list, including local biker gangs and the FC St Pauli ‘Ultras’..."
Gesamten Artikel lesen: Hamburg: European Green Capital 2011
"... Another early focal point is the International Maritime Museum on Koreastrasse, a tall, red-brick former warehouse where all things nautical are displayed on eight levels – each resembling the wooden deck of a ship.
It takes a broad-brush approach to its subject, with displays about, for example, the earliest sailors, great navigators and the world’s navies. For a modern museum, it is perhaps slightly lacking in the interactive and there could be a few too many model ships in glass cases for every visitor’s comfort.
It doesn’t help, either that a prize exhibit was recently stolen. This was the skull of the famous 15th-century Hamburg pirate Klaus Stortebeker. The outlaw’s dome, which was displayed with a large spike through it, vanished in January with various suspects on the police list, including local biker gangs and the FC St Pauli ‘Ultras’..."
Gesamten Artikel lesen: Hamburg: European Green Capital 2011
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