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Ringve Museum

Ringve Museum
En lumsk sommerdag.jpg
Ringve, Norway's National museum of music and musical instruments.
Established 1952
Location Lade, Trondheim, Norway
Coordinates 63°26′51″N 10°27′19″E / 63.447363°N 10.455208°E / 63.447363; 10.455208
Type Music museum, music history and instruments.
Director Ivar Roger Hansen
Website [1]

Ringve Museum is Norway's national museum for music and musical instruments, with collections from all over the world.

Ringve Museum is located in the historic Ringve Farm in Trondheim. Ringve Farm was the childhood home of the Danish-Norwegian nobleman, Peter Tordenskjold. It is situated in a park on the Lade peninsula just outside Trondheim with a view over the Trondheimsfjord, the park forming botanical gardens run by NTNU (the Norwegian University of Science and Technology). The first house on the site was built in 1521, but the current group of buildings dates from the 1740s onwards.

When the estate was auctioned in 1878, it was purchased by the Bachke family and one of the sons, Christian Anker Bachke (1873-1946) acquired the estate in 1919. In late 1919, he married Russian émigré Victoria Rostin Bachke, an artist who fled from the Russian Revolution. The couple had no children but put their considerable energies into their love of music and assembling a collection of historical musical instruments, which now numbers around 1,500 instruments, alongside other artifacts associated with music – pictures, recordings.

The museum is based on the private collection of founder Victoria Bachke and was opened to the public in 1952. Jon Voigt (1928-1997) succeeded Victoria Bachke as director in 1963 and continued until 1997. Over the years many famous musicians visited Ringve, including Artur Schnabel, Lilly Krauss, Ignaz Friedman, Percy Grainger and Kirsten Flagstad, as well as the artist, Edvard Munch.

The public exhibitions are divided in two parts: the Manor House and the Barn.


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