Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum – Tyrolean State Museum

Regional museum · Founded 1823 · Innsbruck, Austria

Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum – Tyrolean State Museum

The Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum is the principal state museum of Tyrol, Austria, housing the most comprehensive collection of Tyrolean art, natural history, archaeology, and cultural history under one institution. Founded in 1823 and named in honour of Archduke Ferdinand II of Austria, the museum occupies a Neo-Gothic building in central Innsbruck and stewards collections ranging from prehistoric Alpine finds to twentieth-century Austrian painting, including significant holdings of Gothic panel painting and works by the Tyrolean-born artist Franz Defregger.

At a glance

Type
State museum (art, archaeology, natural history, cultural history)
Period
Founded 1823; current building mid-19th century
Style
Neo-Gothic historicist building; collections spanning prehistory to modernity
Location
Innsbruck, Tyrol, Austria · 47.2672° N, 11.3955° E

Overview

The Ferdinandeum is both a museum and a learned society, maintaining scholarly research alongside its public exhibitions. Its collections encompass over 700,000 objects, making it one of the largest and most encyclopaedic regional museums in the German-speaking world. As part of the Tiroler Landesmuseen group, it works in partnership with the Zeughaus (historic armoury), the Court Church, and the Volkskunstmuseum to present a complete picture of Tyrolean heritage. Permanent galleries are arranged thematically across floors covering fine arts, applied arts, coins and medals, natural sciences, and Tyrolean history.

History

The museum was established in 1823 as the Museum of the Tyrolean Province, taking the name Ferdinandeum in 1835 in honour of Archduke Ferdinand I, who later became Emperor Ferdinand I of Austria. It grew rapidly through donations from the Tyrolean nobility and the Habsburg court. The current building on Museumstraße was constructed between 1842 and 1884 and has been extended and renovated several times since. During the twentieth century the collections were significantly reorganised and the museum expanded its research mandate to include archaeology, ethnography, and natural history alongside the original fine arts focus.

What you see

The fine arts galleries hold an outstanding collection of Gothic altarpieces and panel paintings from Tyrolean workshops, as well as Baroque and nineteenth-century Austrian paintings including a dedicated Franz Defregger room. Archaeology galleries display Bronze Age and Roman finds from Alpine excavation sites, including weapons, jewellery, and votive objects. The natural history section covers Alpine geology, mineralogy, and zoology. A coin and medal cabinet holds one of the region’s most important numismatic collections. Temporary exhibitions on the upper floors present contemporary art alongside thematic shows drawn from the permanent holdings.

Cultural significance

The Ferdinandeum is the memory institution of Tyrol, providing a continuous institutional record of the region’s art, nature, and society from prehistory to the present day. Its Gothic panel painting collection is of European art-historical importance, and its archaeological holdings document the Alpine Bronze Age with particular depth. For scholars of Austrian and Central European cultural history, the museum’s library and archive represent an essential primary resource.

Practical information

Address
Museumstraße 15, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria
Opening hours
Check official website for current hours
Admission
Check official website for current pricing
Website
tiroler-landesmuseen.at

Getting there

The museum is centrally located in Innsbruck, within walking distance of the main railway station (Innsbruck Hauptbahnhof, approximately ten minutes on foot). Several tram lines stop nearby on Maria-Theresien-Straße. Innsbruck Airport is about four kilometres to the west and well connected by bus and taxi. The museum is also easily reached on foot from the old town and the Golden Roof.

Sources & resources

📷 Diventa un fotografo di Cultural Heritage Online

Condividi le tue foto dei luoghi: restano pubblicate con la tua firma come autore. Più vengono viste, più ti fai conoscere — e presto un concorso premierà le foto più apprezzate.

Accedi o registrati gratis per aggiungere una foto
📋 Copy & share on social
Scroll to Top