Sorbian Museum
The Sorbian Museum, ,, is hosted in the salthouse of the Ortenburg, Bautzen. It houses approximately 35,000 inventarized objects, making it the most important museum of Sorbian culture and history.
History
The association Maćica Serbska included the establishment of a Sorbian museum on their agenda in 1856. It was the first institution to collect ethnological and historical objects connected to the Sorbs.For an 1896 exhibition of Saxon arts and crafts in Dresden, exhibits were collected and presented by Sorbian institutions in the so-called Wendish village. When the Serbski dom was inaugurated in 1904, the Sorbian Museum was opened simultaneously on the third floor. The closure of the Serbski dom by the Nazi government in 1937 put an end to the first Sorbian Museum. In 1942, its collection was included in the municipal museum of Bautzen.
In the German Democratic Republic, a museum of Sorbian history and ethnology was founded in 1957 in Hoyerswerda. As objects of the former Wendish Museum kept being restituted, the museum moved to Bautzen due to a shortage of space. The salthouse of the Ortenburg in Bautzen was chosen as the new seat of the Sorbian Museum, since the original building was destroyed in 1945 and the Serbski dom, its replacement, was not built to include the museum. It became part of the municipal museums of Bautzen. In 1988, the exhibition was redesigned and the Sorbian Museum reopened as an independent institution.