Local Prehistoric Traces Paléolithique à l'âge du bronze (≈ 1505000 av. J.-C.)
Searches revealing ancient human occupations.
1884
Museum Foundation
Museum Foundation 1884 (≈ 1884)
Creation to house the bird collection.
XVIIe–XXe siècles
Age of textile gold
Age of textile gold XVIIe–XXe siècles (≈ 2007)
Period of wool sheets in Elbeuf.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Pierre Noury - Ornithological collector
Founder of the museum in 1884.
Raymond Dendeville - Elbuvian painter
Exhibition work, 20th century.
Berthe Mouchel - Local Artist
Represented in the collections.
Origin and history
The Elbeuf Museum was founded in 1884 to house Pierre Noury's ornithological collection. Over the years, it has been enriched by donations, bequests and acquisitions covering various fields of the natural sciences, as well as prehistoric and ancient objects from local archaeological excavations. These discoveries, including those of the Gallo-Roman villa in Val Caron and the Uggate site, have allowed the reconstruction of aspects of life in the Seine Valley in the early centuries of our era.
The museum has also specialized in the preservation of the textile industrial heritage of Elbeuf, a city renowned for its wool linens from the seventeenth century until the mid-20th century. The collections include machines illustrating the stages of sheetmaking, as well as an evocation of working life related to this industry. At the same time, a collection of fine arts highlights local artists, such as Raymond Dendeville and Berthe Mouchel, active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The museum's collections of natural sciences cover a variety of fields, such as botany, entomology, geology, ornithology and paleontology. These sets allow us to explore the relationship between man and his environment in the Seine Valley, from prehistory to contemporary times. The museum is housed in an old textile factory, highlighting its anchoring in the industrial history of the city.
Labeled Musée de France, it offers a cross-sectional view of the region's natural, archaeological and industrial heritage. Local excavations revealed traces of human occupation from Paleolithic through Neolithic, Bronze Age and Gallo-Roman period, illustrating the evolution of lifestyles and techniques over the millennia.
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