Museums
in India 
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Museums in Delhi
In the Museums in Delhi there are
a lot of tribal and rural handicrafts spotlighted here include authentically
constructed mud huts delightfully decorated with folk art, woodcarvings,
paintings, paper- mache crafts and embroidery. The largest and best
collections of costume dolls all over the world and many more.
National Rail museum
: National Rail museum is a must for all those who suffer from
the nostalgia of good old times and long to retreat to those days when the
steam engines gave a long inviting whistle just before the train started
rolling off the platform. The locomotives displayed here are in
themselves a storehouse of information on the history of railways in India
as they range over the 150 years of the railways in India. The highlights of
the museum are - a model of India's very first train, a steam engine that
made its journey from Mumbai to Thane in 1853, the oldest locomotive in the
world, which is still working, the Viceregal Dining Car of1 889, the Prince
of Wales Saloon of 1875, Maharaja of Mysore's Saloon of 1899, Maharaja of
Baroda's Saloon of 1886 and the best of all, the Fairy Queen built in 1855,
which is considered to be the best preserved steam locomotive engines of her
age. The imperial saloons are a delight to see with their elaborate interior
designs.
Delhi Crafts Museum : There are
some of the most rare and lovely pieces of art and craft that have been
carefully and selectively collected from all over the country can be found
here. Tourists are very much attracted by the live demonstrations by the
revered artisans and skilled persons invited here from different regions who
offer close glimpses of the Indian folk arts and the methods of making
them.Started in 1956, the Crafts Museum kicked off in 1956 had collected
over 20,000 objects by early 1980's. The tribal and rural
handicrafts spotlighted here include authentically constructed mud huts
delightfully decorated with folk art, woodcarvings, paintings, paper- mache
crafts, embroidery and even a full-sized wooden haveli from Gujarat.
Besides the Tribal and Rural Craft Gallery, it houses Crafts Museum
Shop, Gallery of Courtly Crafts, Textile Gallery, Gallery of Popular
Culture, and a reference section for the scholars, designers and crafts
persons.
Shankar's International Dolls Museum :
The largest and best collections of costume dolls all over the world,
Delhi Dolls Museum is suitably named Shankar's International Dolls Museum
after its founder K. Shankar Pillai. In 1957, the museum had kicked off with
its modest collection of just a thousand dolls. 5,000 more dolls were added
to its collection (most of them were sent in as gifts) between 1965 and
1987. Today, the museum boasts of over 6,500 exhibits from 85 different
countries. There are two sections of the museum. One of them displays dolls
from Yugoslavia, Greece, Mexico, Thailand, Poland, South Korea, the United
Kingdom, former USSR, North and South America, Australia, New Zealand and
other countries
The other section displays dolls from Asian
countries, the Middle East, Africa, and different states of India. The
highlights of the costume dolls are ones that have come from Rajasthan,
Kashmir and Kerala, a 250-year-old doll from Switzerland, Maypole dancers of
Hungary, Flamenco dancers of Spain; the Kabuki dancer of Japan, a scene from
the Ramayana imported from Thailand, Bridal pairs of Indonesia, Kandy
Perahera Festival of Sri Lanka and many more.
Gandhi
Museum : The origin of this Museum has its roots in the times, when
soon after the much-regretted assassination of Mahatma Gandhi on January 30,
1948, efforts started in Mumbai to search, collect and preserve personal
relics, photographs, manuscripts, books, journals and documents and the
audio-visual material related to Gandhiji's life, philosophy and work.
Later, the collection and the work shifted to Delhi and in early 1951, a
museum dedicated to the Father of Our Nation was set up in the Government
hutments adjoining Kota House. The present place is the third home to the
museum and is believed to be the permanent one built strategically at Raj
Ghat, opposite to Gandhiji's 'samadhi', in 1959. Dr. Rajendra Prasad, the
first President of India, formally inaugurated this imposing two Storey
Museum on January 30, 1961 and it was named 'Gandhi Memorial Museum' or
'Gandhi Smarak Sangrahalaya'. However, due to many regional museums
springing up with the same name, it is now popularly called 'National Gandhi
Museum' or 'Rashtriya Gandhi Sangrahalaya'.
Indira
Gandhi Memorial Museum : The house stands amidst a beautiful garden full
of mature trees and pretty fragrant flowers. No alterations have been done
to Indira's library and living room and has been maintained to look the same
as she had left them on the fateful day of October 31, 1984, when she was
killed by her own Sikh bodyguards while she was strolling in the gardens.
The public is not allowed to enter these rooms but one can have a peek
inside the rooms from the windows that open out in the gardens. The path
where she was assassinated is pictured here as a memorial. There is a rare
collection of photographs that documents the life of this, one of the most
prominent leaders in India, from her childhood to her days as Prime
Minister. The house also has a number of rooms that have been decorated to
her son Rajiv Gandhi, who was himself immensely popular among the masses
when he was a Prime Minister
National Museum or
Yadughar : The museum has an affluent variety of all sides of ancient
Indian history and also that of central Asia. In fact the museum takes one
through an enthralling journey of ancient India and exhibits pottery, rare
coins, and many other things that includes art, architecture and costumes of
those times. A must-see for every tourist, its foundations were laid in 1955
by Jawaharlal Nehru and it was opened for the public in 1965.
Collections
from Mahenjadaro, Harappa, Lothal, Kalibangan and antiques of prehistorical
periods have been showcased here vividly displaying the history dating back
to 5000 years. There are collections of Indus civilization,
Brahminical, Jain and Buddhist sculptural antiques, color paintings of
Mughal, Rajput and Deccan empres and also the holy Git Gobinda, the holy
Mahabharata and the holy Bhagawat Gita written in golden alphabets.
Octagonal mini Quran, Jahangir's diary, Babarnama in Babar's handwriting,
musical instruments of more than 300 types and varieties of tribal dresses
supplement the museum with their sheer presence. The antique collections of
Sir Aurel Stein are also a craze among the visitors. The women love the
section that deals with the evolution of ornaments through ages from
prehistoric era to recent modern times and the change of trends in their
shapes, sizes, designs and patterns
National Museum
of Natural History : The Museum houses along with its various exhibit
galleries, a Bio-Science Computer Room, an Activity Room and a Mobile
Museum, used to promote environmental awareness among different target
groups. The museum also arranges various in-house and outdoor activities
from time to time such as the film shows and activities for the benefit of
school children and teachers within the museum premises. They also arrange a
month-long summer programme for teenagers titled 'Know Your Environment',
where children are encouraged to make nature painting and animal/plant
modeling. Besides these programs, the educational activities of the museum
include LEARN (Lesson on Environmental Awareness and Resources) Programmes
for schools children of Classes VI to XII
Nehru
Memorial Museum, Planetarium & Library : the south of Rashtrapati
Bhawan, Trimurti Bhawan was converted in 1954 to the residence of the Prime
Minister of India. As Jawaharlal Nehru continued to be the Prime Minister
during his lifetime, it continued to be his residence until his death in
1964. After that, it was devoted to him and was converted into Nehru Museum.
It depicts the life of Jawaharlal Nehru against the backdrop of the
different stages of the Indian freedom movement of his time. There is a
library of printed materials, books, periodicals, newspapers and photographs
focusing especially on the history of modern India. Among other things a
repository of unpublished records of institutions and private papers of
eminent Indians kept here can prove to be a primary source for historical
researches. The prizes, awards and honors received by Mr. Nehru are also
displayed here along with his photographs. A beautiful rose garden and the
historic speech of Jawahal Lal Nehru that he gave on the eve of 14 - 15
August, 1947 inscribed on a stone in Jawahar Jyoti garden are a delight.
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