Museo Municipal Emilio Bacardí Moreau | |
Established | 1899 |
---|---|
Location | Santiago de Cuba |
Coordinates | 20°01′18″N 75°49′40″W / 20.02155°N 75.82788°W / 20.02155; -75.82788 |
Founder | Emilio Bacardi Moreau |
The Emilio Bacardí Moreau Municipal Museum (Spanish: Museo Municipal Emilio Bacardí Moreau) is a museum in Santiago de Cuba, Cuba. Dating back to 1899, this museum is the oldest in Santiago de Cuba.
History
It was established in 1899 by its founder and famous rum distiller Emilio Bacardi Moreau, in Santiago de Cuba. Situated on Calle Pío Rosada, between Calles Heredia and Aguilera, it is Santiago de Cuba's oldest museum.
Emilio Bacardí and his wife, Elvira Cape, embarked on a significant journey overseas in 1912. Their trip yielded an impressive collection of antiquities and art, as well as Cuba's first genuine mummy and sarcophagus from Egypt. These items would later be displayed. Additional exhibits in the museum included three death masks of Napoleon, a significant collection of artifacts from Cuba's wars of independence, art pieces deaccessioned from the Museo del Prado, and important works representing the French modernist era.
Gallery
See also
External links
Media related to Museo Municipal Emilio Bacardi Moreau at Wikimedia Commons
References
- Focus on International Library and Information Work. (2002). United Kingdom: International Library and Information Group.
- Twigg, A. (2004). 101 top historical sites of Cuba. Vancouver: Prospect Books.
- Coulombe, Charles A. Rum. Citadel Press.
- Baron, L. P., Falk, P. H. (2008). F. Luis Mora : America's first Hispanic master (1874-1940). United States: Falk Art Reference.