
Музей Львівський історичний музей (Львовский исторический музей)
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Das Museum ist schon interessant, leider sind russische oder ukrainische Sprachkenntnisse nötig (oder eine sprachkundige Begleitung) da es an Übersetzungen mangelt. Die Abteilung zur Stadtgeschichte überzeugt eher als die renovierungsbedürftige Ausstellung zur "Heldenstadt Odessa" im 2. Weltkrieg.
I bought a ticket at the museum of ancient history. It costs 40 UAH and there was literally just one small room of stuff none of which was in English. The ticket then didn't let me into other parts of the historical museum. Staff are outrageously rude and try and flog you excursions as well.
We entered in the Lviv Historical Museum hosted inside the Korniakt Palace with its Italian courtyard and called as the little Wawel because of it. The interior consisted of a few baroque and neoclassical rooms with paintings and objects from that period. The lady working there spoke Polish, as most people in Lviv did, so i could understand a little and my girlfriend was able to translate most of the things for me.
Çok enteresan bir müze değil. Çok katlı olmasına rağmen içeriği az. Görevliler hiçbir şeye yaklaşmanıza izin vermiyorlar. Sadece içinde bulunduğunuz bölümün ışığı açık oluyor. Çıktığınız anda kapatıyorlar. Aynı yere tekrar bakmak isteseniz söyleyip açtırmanız gerekecek. Görevliler hiç İngilizce bilmiyor. İngilizce konuştuğunuz zaman oflayıp pufluyorlar. Lviv’deki bütün müzelerde kullandığım öğrenci kartımı burada kullanamadım. “Ukrayna okulu olması gerekiyor” gibi bir şeyler söylediler. Pahalı bir yer değil. Kişi başı 30 grivna ödedik. 5-6 lira gibi bir şeye denk geliyor. Vaktiniz varsa gidip görebilirsiniz ama biz pek keyif almadık.
We went there on a Wednesday. Nobody (incl. the staff!) told us that the actual museum is closed on Wednesdays but you can buy a ticket to see just the renaissance courtyard. This ticket gave us access to the Casa Leone restaurant where we had a very very bad ice coffee in which there was no ice of any kind ("it melted" - said the waiter!). Anyway, we went to this museum again next day and saw the royal apartments of king Jan Sobieski. These are very well kept and worth seeing, especially the exhibit of aristocratic medals of various orders. These kind of medals are rarely seen on display. They also have a lock of hair of Napoleon! On the way down, on the first floor, we accidentally discovered another room with paintings - for which supposedly another ticket was needed. No idea what was that room about. We didn't have time to investigate.Too many sites in one building and too many tickets.
1. The bldg with hist of western ukraine and diaspora was closed for renovation. 2. The so-called royal rooms were small and nothing special; the Italian courtyard was, well, a small courtyard that didn't justify a separate admission fee; and the obnoxious woman selling tickets actually gave me attitude for giving her a 50 hryvnia bill to pay a 40 hryvnia fee. Jeez! Maybe she was really supposed to be an exhibit showing what petty bureaucrats were like in soviet times.