Creation voted by the Municipal Council 1874 (≈ 1874)
Initiative of Alfred Danicourt to found the museum.
7 octobre 1877
Opening of the museum
Opening of the museum 7 octobre 1877 (≈ 1877)
Installation in the left wing of the city hall.
1887
Legs from Danicourt's collections
Legs from Danicourt's collections 1887 (≈ 1887)
The city inherits its immense collections.
1914-1917
Destruction during the Great War
Destruction during the Great War 1914-1917 (≈ 1916)
95% of lost collections, ruined building.
1941
Burial of collections
Burial of collections 1941 (≈ 1941)
Protection against the Occupying during the Second War.
juillet 1955
Museum reopening
Museum reopening juillet 1955 (≈ 1955)
Resettlement in the reconstructed city hall.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Alfred Danicourt - Founder and Mayor of Peronne
Collector, legatee of the museum's works.
Félix Louis - Museum curator
Saves 2-3 percent of collections in 1914.
Anatole Gronier - Museum guard
Helps bury the objects in 1914.
Radegonde - Future Queen of the Francs
Linked to the Merovingian history of Peronne.
Saint Fursy - Irish monk
Entered Peronne in 650.
Origin and history
The Alfred-Danicourt Museum was founded in 1877 in Peronne, in the department of the Somme, thanks to the initiative of Alfred Danicourt, mayor of the city and passionate collector. Opened in the left wing of the city hall, it initially gathers archaeological collections and works of art, enriched by donations, private bequests and state deposits. When Danicourt died in 1887, his immense collections were left to the city, and the museum took his name. This heritage was almost entirely destroyed during the First World War: in 1917, 95% of the collections disappeared during the German retreat on the Hindenburg Line, and the building was reduced to ruins. Only 2 to 3% of the objects, buried in 1914 by the curator Felix Louis and the guardian Anatole Gronier, were saved.
Between the two wars, the museum partially rebuilds its collections through purchases and donations from contemporary artists, financed by war damage. However, he was not resettled in the city hall rebuilt in 1927, and his works remained scattered. During the Second World War, the 1914 surviving objects were again buried in 1941 to protect them. After the bombings of 1940, which seriously damaged the town hall, the museum was finally reopened in July 1955 in the reconstructed right wing, where it still stands today.
The museum's collections cover a wide range of periods, from Prehistory to the Middle Ages, with flint tools, Gaulish coins (including the famous Statère de Vercingetorix), antique jewellery, and pictorial works by pictorial artists. The Médaillier Danicourt, an exceptional set of more than 400 Gaulish, Greek and Roman coins, is the centrepiece of the event. Part of the collections are digitized and accessible online via the Monande and Ambiani platforms. The museum also organizes temporary exhibitions, lectures and school activities, perpetuating its cultural role in the region.
The city of Peronne, marked by a turbulent history as a strong border square, sees its archaeological heritage highlighted through the museum. Local excavations, including those of the Gallo-Roman villa of Athias, as well as the Merovingian objects, bear witness to its importance since ancient times. The museum thus traces the evolution of the region, from prehistoric tools to medieval seats, passing through the inheritance of figures such as Queen Radegonde or Saint Fursy, buried in Peronne in 650.
Despite the successive destruction of the two world wars, the Alfred-Danicourt Museum remains a symbol of cultural resilience. Its history reflects the conservation efforts of figures like Felix Louis, as well as the city's desire to preserve a unique archaeological and artistic heritage. Today, it offers a complete panorama of local history, from ancient glyptic to picardic paintings, while integrating into a dynamic of digital and educational valorization.
The museum is labeled Musée de France and administratively depends on the town hall of Peronne. Its rooms, located on the first floor of the City Hall, house archaeological treasures saved twice from destruction, as well as works by regional artists. Its official address is Hôtel de ville, 80201 Péronne, and it is accessible to the public with renewed annual cultural programming.
Announcements
Please log in to post a review