The Most Extraordinary Museums in the World!

One of the most accurate and enjoyable choices you can make to get to know a country, city, culture ...

The Most Extraordinary Museums in the World!

The Most Extraordinary Museums in the World!

One of the most accurate and enjoyable choices you can make to get to know a country, city, culture better or go on a historical journey would be to turn your route to museums. The themes, collections and artifacts of the museums can make you feel completely different emotions while taking you on a journey to the pages of the past. At the same time, it will provide you with important clues about the city and culture you are trying to explore. The new perspective and cultural values ​​you will gain can drag you to the shores of new worlds and make you feel new excitements on a pleasant journey.

When it comes to museums, the door that opens to different worlds within impressive architectural structures presented with different themes, where famous works of art and collections with different concepts are exhibited, comes to life in your mind, right? When we look at the world’s most visited museums, we assume in our minds that all museums have similar shapes and the same concepts.

So, do the works that are worth exhibiting in a museum have to be very special, very valuable, famous or classic? As hard as it may be, there are no general or specific criteria that works in museums must meet. For this reason, some museums around the world have managed to attract attention by opening doors to their visitors with interesting and different concepts and collections.

When you get to know the world’s most interesting museums, you can really be surprised by the variety of objects on display and the imagination behind these museums. However, our imagination can be a little difficult when it comes to extraordinary. Therefore, you may need to have a strong psychology to visit some of the museums on the list. If you want to go beyond the classics and get to know museums that will offer an interesting experience, we will go on a pleasant journey with you right now. If you’re ready, let’s get the coffee ready, let’s get started…

1. Museum of Broken Hearts, Zagreb

The Museum of Broken Hearts, located in the Upper Town of Zagreb, Croatia, is one of the most interesting museums in the world due to its concept. As the name suggests, the remnants of human relations that have ended are exhibited in this museum. Moreover, the items in question do not have to be mere souvenirs of a love affair. It is possible to see the remnants of all kinds of relationships full of experiences and experiences in the museum. Dried flowers, letters, pillowcases, broken glasses, fridge magnets, a strand of hair that has been hidden for years, toys, bridal bouquets… All the objects exhibited in the Broken Hearts Museum remind you of relationships that did not have a happy ending for some reason and left countless traces behind.

The establishment story of the Broken Hearts Museum is also very interesting. Olinka Vištica and Dražen Grubišić, the founders of the museum, decided to end their four-year relationship in 2003. During this separation process, while joking with each other, they came up with the idea of ​​exhibiting the belongings of their relationship in a museum. Over time, they managed to bring together both their own belongings and those that their close friends gave them. On top of that, in 2006, the Broken Hearts Museum opened its doors to its visitors.

Broken Hearts Museum looks like an art gallery with its white walls. Among the exhibits, there are some very familiar ones, and some that may surprise you. The expansion of the collection in the museum is already proceeding through donations. Anyone who wishes can donate objects from their ended relationships to the museum. Since the objects are also exhibited with their stories, the visitors of the museum can learn what each object went through until they got there. If you happen to be in Zagreb, you can visit the Broken Hearts Museum to witness these experiences and witness the sad memories of the exhibits.

2-Museum of Torture, Amsterdam

Located in Amsterdam, the capital of the Netherlands, the Torture Museum is one of the scariest and saddest museums you can visit. Each item, tool or object exhibited in this museum; It reveals the bleakest and darkest aspects of both European and human history. In fact, this is not the only museum in the world built on the theme of torture. However, due to both the chilling atmosphere inside and the real collections, the Torture Museum in Amsterdam attracts a lot of attention from visitors.

When you step into the Torture Museum, you will be going back about five centuries in the dusty pages of history and entering the darkness of the Middle Ages in Europe. It is possible to see more than forty torture instruments in the collections exhibited in the museum. The tools in question also reveal the methods used by the rulers of the Middle Ages to punish and execute the people they accused for various reasons. You might guess that these methods are all incomprehensible and inhumane. The instruments of punishment by torturing the people exhibited in the museum prove once again how cruel and cruel their people can be. The dim light that dominates the entire Torture Museum reinforces the chilling atmosphere you enter.

Considering that the number of countries still using torture as a punishment method is not small, it is possible to say that the Torture Museum has an important mission. The collections related to torture displayed in the museum are exhibited in order to raise awareness among the visitors. The Torture Museum can be visited every day of the week between 10:00 in the morning and 23:00 in the evening. If you go to Amsterdam, you can visit the Torture Museum and take a restless journey through the dark past of the Middle Ages.

3-Museum of Innocence, Istanbul

Our Nobel Prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk’s novel The Museum of Innocence, published in 2008, tells a love story that started in 1974 and ended in the early 2000s. Of course, the stories told in the novel are not limited to the love story. In the novel, Pamuk draws the panorama of Istanbul and Turkey of the period for his readers through wealthy and middle-class families. Memories and flashbacks in the novel also shed light on Turkey in the 1950s. Moreover, this novel has another very important feature: In the Beyoğlu district of Istanbul, there is a museum founded by Orhan Pamuk and bearing the same name as the novel.

Orhan Pamuk decided to open a museum reflecting the fictional universe in the Museum of Innocence in the 1990s, while still designing his novel. In the spring of 2012, it made this dream come true and opened the doors of the Museum of Innocence to its visitors. The museum has the distinction of being the first and only one in the world because it was built based on a fictional novel universe. The items collected over the years by Kemal, the protagonist of the novel, are exhibited in the museum as collections. In fact, it is possible to see everything that the characters of the novel see, hear or imagine in the museum.

The building that houses the Museum of Innocence is a recently restored building that has been in existence since the 19th century. Since there are eighty-three chapters in the book, the collections in the museum are displayed on eighty-three showcases. There is a fee to enter the museum, but a museum ticket is included in each edition of the Museum of Innocence. It is not necessary to have read the book to enjoy the museum. But of course, for the readers of the Museum of Innocence, each item in the museum has a much greater meaning.

4-Bad Art Museum, ADB

The Museum of Bad Art, located in the US state of Massachusetts, makes a name for itself with collections with different concepts than the museums you are used to seeing. In this museum, instead of the works of art that have gained the appreciation and attention of art lovers, “undeniably bad” works are featured. Founded in 1993, the museum currently displays 600 very bad works of art. All of the works bear the signatures of non-famous painters, and each of them is described as “bad” or “lousy” works by the artist.

The story of the emergence of the Museum of Bad Art begins in the early 1990s when Scott Wilson, the founder of the museum, found a painting in the trash. Wilson decided to collect bad artworks on the first painting he found, and for a while he visited flea markets and bought different paintings. Although his profession was antiques in this process, he switched to collectorship over time. When the bad artworks he collected were enough to open an exhibition, he started to exhibit his first exhibition in the basement of a house in Boston. Over time, the exhibitions moved to the Dedham Community Theater and the Somerville Theatre. The museum in Massachusetts was opened in 1993.

The name of the work that Wilson found from the garbage and which was instrumental in the establishment of the museum is Lucy in the Field with Flowers. Unfortunately, this painting, whose ownership is unknown, is one of the most cult of evil works of art. When the painting started to be exhibited in the museum and appeared in the newspapers, the grandson of the person depicted in the painting reached the curators of the museum. It turned out that the painting was commissioned by Lucy’s mother, who was depicted in the painting, many years ago, and even hung in the living room of their house for a long time. However, since Lucy’s family did not like the painting at all, this work ended up in the garbage over time and somehow came across Scott Wilson.

The Bad Art Museum still continues to collect bad art through donations. However, for the work to be exhibited in the museum, it must be really bad. Some submitted works are not accepted by the curators on the grounds that they are not bad enough. The museum, which has three different galleries, has approximately 60-70 works per gallery. Since there are 600 works in total, the works in the gallery are also changed on a rotating basis. If you want to closely examine the bad works of art and visit this interesting museum, you can turn your route to Massachusetts.

5-Cadaver Museum, Guben

While visiting the museums where impressive works of art and collections are exhibited, you enter into a very pleasant and immersive atmosphere. However, the Cadaver Museum, located in the city of Guben, in the Brandenburg state of Germany, is a museum that can scare you with its collections far beyond the definition of a museum we are used to. Built inside a restored textile factory, the exhibition area of ​​more than three thousand square meters in this museum hosts real human and animal cadavers. As a result, an extraordinary atmosphere emerges that you will probably shudder through, rather than in awe and delight.

The Cadaver Museum was founded by Gunther Von Hagens, a Polish anatomist. The human and animal bodies in the museum undergo a series of processes so that they can be turned into cadavers suitable for the exhibition. The purpose of the Cadaver Museum, which is open to the public, is to make anatomy accessible to everyone. The visitors of the museum are usually doctors, professors, health workers and students. Because the Cadaver Museum also gives its visitors the chance to attend many training workshops and gain practical anatomy knowledge over various models or plastinates.

Entrance to the Cadaver Museum is actually paid. However, anyone who wishes can donate his body to this museum to be used after his death. Donors don’t pay any fees to enter the museum in their lifetime. The museum is only open on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. In addition, all visitors are required to wear a medical mask throughout the museum tour. It is possible to visit the museum alone or with a guide. Visitors who want to have detailed anatomical information about cadavers with fully preserved muscle integrity usually complete their tour under the leadership of a guide.

6-Avanos Hair Museum, Cappadocia

Did you know that one of the museums that entered the lists of the most interesting museums in the world is the Hair Museum in Avanos, Nevşehir? Founded by Galip Körükçü, a pot master from Nevşehir, the museum started in 1979 when a French female tourist who visited her workshop left him a lock of her hair cut as a souvenir. Körükçü hung this strand of hair on the wall of his workshop. Of course, he never guessed that the first strand of hair he hung would lead to the opening of a world-famous museum over the years. However, this situation later became a tradition and female tourists visiting the workshop started to cut a lock of their hair and hang it on the wall of the workshop if they wished.

Today, the number of hair strands hanging in the Hair Museum is estimated to be more than 16 thousand. Thanks to this, the museum even managed to enter the Guinness Book of Records in 1998. Even more interestingly, the papers attached to each strand of hair hung on the walls include the name and contact information of the owner of the hair. In this way, the identity and story of the hair remains memorable. In addition, Körükçü organizes a draw between these names every year and presents a one-week Cappadocia holiday to the winner. All women who want to be eligible to participate in the lottery have to stop by Galip Körükçü’s workshop during their travels to Cappadocia and leave a lock of hair for her.

The entrance fee to the museum is also quite symbolic. If you shop at the souvenir section of the museum, you can enter for free. In short, when we look at the number of domestic and foreign tourists it hosts every year, we can say that the Hair Museum contributes a lot to the tourism of Cappadocia. You can also stop by the Hair Museum on your trip to Cappadocia, or donate a lock of your hair to the museum if you wish.

7-Sewer Museum, Paris

The sewage museum, the worst smelling museum in the world, is located in Paris, the capital of France. When you think of the Sewer Museum, you may think of a museum where you can find parts of the sewer system used in the past or the plans showing how the system works. However, in fact, this is not the case at all. This museum is indeed located inside the sewer.

The French, who received the water needed during the Middle Ages directly from the Seine River, built the first sewers of Paris in the 1200s at the request of King Philippe Auguste. After the streets were asphalted, the first closed sewer system was completed in 1370, which drained the sewage into the streams of Paris. The system was developed over time, and in the 19th century it was completely renewed and modernized. Here, the Sewage Museum offers you an extremely interesting environment, although not very hygienic, where you can witness this history closely.

The corridors of the Sewage Museum are actually narrow and dark tunnels of the sewer system. Not all of the tunnels, but only 450 meters of them are open to visitors. However, this part is quite enough for an extraordinary experience such as wandering underground in a city and being in a sewer system.

If you happen to be in Paris and want to see a completely unusual museum, you can include the Sewage Museum in your list of places to visit. In the warnings on the official website of the museum, visitors are reminded that they will enter a smelly and humid environment. There are also extremely disturbing objects such as stuffed rats in the souvenir section of the museum.

8-Museum of Witchcraft and Magic, Boscastle

There may be many people who think that fairies, magic and witches can only exist in storybooks or fantasy movies. However, Boscastle Castle, located in the English county of Cornwall, hosts a museum founded by people who do not agree with this idea. The Witchcraft and Magic Museum, which was opened in 1960 and has undergone various transformations over time, appeals to those who are interested in the history of witchcraft and want to see objects associated with mystical events up close. Although it is not the only museum opened in Cornwall on witchcraft and magic, the Witchcraft and Magic Museum, which contains more than three thousand documents and objects, has already managed to become one of the most popular addresses in Cornwall. Visitors need to make an appointment in advance to visit the museum.

The Museum of Witchcraft and Magic was opened as a result of many years of efforts of its founder, Cecil Williamson. Williamson, who has been interested in mystical events and magic since his childhood, drew his career plan on filmmaking, but he also managed to open the museum of his dreams. Although the museum was originally opened in 1960, it has changed hands several times since then. Over time, both the international recognition of the museum increased and it gained independence. The interesting collections aiming to shed light on Britain’s history of magic are in great demand, especially by visitors interested in superstitions and magic. The collections also include information and items about women who were tried for witchcraft and sentenced to death in the past years. In the souvenir section, objects such as large witch hats, brooms or magic spheres can be purchased. The Museum of Witchcraft and Magic reinforces this atmosphere, as Boscastle is already a village with a mystical atmosphere with its old houses, misty streets and interesting architecture.

9-Museum of the Holy Spirits in Purgatory, Rome

One of the most interesting themed museums in the world, the Museum of the Holy Spirits in Purgatory is located in a church in the center of Rome, the capital of Italy. The Museum of Holy Spirits in Purgatory, as the name suggests, is a museum where the remains and traces of people whose souls are thought to be trapped in purgatory are exhibited. Moreover, the history of the establishment of this museum is quite interesting.

The foundation of the Museum of the Holy Spirits in Purgatory was caused by the fire in the church of Chiesa del Sacro Cuore del Suffragio in Rome in 1897. The chapel of the church was also engulfed in flames during the fire. Victor Jouët, who was the priest of the church during this period, suddenly saw a human face on the wall behind the altar. According to Victor Jouët, this person, who looked at him rather sad and unhappy, was trying to communicate with people in life because he was condemned to live in purgatory.

The priest, who could not get this event out of his mind after the fire, devoted a significant part of his time to finding documents, traces and evidences about other souls in limbo. Already, about ten documents and photographs that make up the collection in the museum were brought together by Jouët. Among these documents are fingerprints that are believed to have been left by the people in question after their deaths. Every object in the collection is considered sacred.

The purpose of the establishment of the Museum of Holy Spirits in Purgatory is to allow visitors to pray for the peace of the souls in purgatory when they come here. Of course, there is no evidence of the authenticity of the documents exhibited in the museum. However, the atmosphere of both the church and the museum can cause visitors to shiver. If you want to have an interesting experience on your trip to Rome and visit one of the most extraordinary museums in the world, you can turn your route to the Museum of the Holy Spirits in Purgatory.

10-Parasite Museum, Tokyo

The Parasite Museum, which is by far one of the most interesting and creepy museums in the world, does not have an atmosphere that will make you feel good while you are visiting, to be honest. Located in Tokyo, the capital of Japan, this unusual place is also the only museum in the world dedicated to parasites. The founder of the museum, which has been hosting its visitors since 1953, Dr. Satoru Kamegai came up with this strange idea to give people detailed information about the cycle of life and parasites. In fact, the museum is located in a scientific facility that has been working on parasites for years.

The number of parasite specimens and related materials on display at the Parasite Museum is around 300. The ground floor of the museum, which consists of two floors, is devoted to different specimens on display in order to show how diverse the parasites are. In addition, some educational films shot on this theme are also shown on this floor. The second floor is arranged to showcase the life cycle of parasites and their impact on human life. The collections on this floor explain which organs the parasites can infect and what they can cause if they do.

You really need a strong stomach to visit the Parasite Museum. Because the parasites exhibited in the museum do not offer you a very pleasant appearance. However, if you want to visit a truly extraordinary museum and have more detailed information about parasites, the best place to turn is the Parasite Museum.

11-Museum of Foreign Debt, Buenos Aires

The great economic crisis that started in Argentina in 2001-2002 led to the establishment of one of the most interesting museums in the world. Located at the University of Buenos Aires and established in 2005, the Museum of Foreign Debt is a museum that was opened as a lesson in the truest sense of the word. Although, if we consider that the Argentina economy has not recovered yet, it can be argued how much an example the works exhibited in the museum are. However, this does not change the fact that the Museum of Foreign Debt is one of the strangest museums in the world. Argentina, which has the highest foreign debt in the world, reaching an amount of 100 billion dollars in 2001, tries to draw attention to the dangers of borrowing abroad in the Museum of Foreign Debt.

The entrance to the museum, which is located in the economics department of the university, is free. Among the works exhibited in the museum, there are toys and models intended to explain the danger of foreign debt to children in an appropriate language.

Of course, the works in the museum are not only designed for children. Another striking design is the huge black sponge in the museum. This sponge, which symbolizes the moment when the money obtained from the debts is exhausted, in short, the end of the road, represents the black hole. Visitors can enter this hole if they wish. In short, in Argentina, where 40% of the population has lived below the hunger threshold for many years, the Foreign Debt Museum attributes a very important value. If you visit Buenos Aires, you can visit this museum and examine the interesting works in it more closely.

12-The Nothing Museum, Zurich

The Museum of Nothing in Zurich, Switzerland, as the name suggests, promises you a completely different museum experience. There are no works of art, collections or valuables in this museum. The entire museum consists of blank walls or paintings.

The Nothing Museum is the only museum in the history of art dedicated to the concept of “nothing” and its various manifestations. In fact, there are many works of art in the museum. Some of these works even bear the signature of famous 20th and 21st century artists such as Andy Warhol, Marcel Duchamp, Yves Klein, Piero Manzoni and Richard Serra. However, some of these works already consist of only empty frames, and some of them cannot be seen with the naked eye. For example, many of the sculptures exhibited in the museum were constructed using invisible materials or air. When this is the case, a very interesting sight emerges. When you enter an empty museum, you are quite stunned about what exactly you should examine.

The motivation for the establishment of the Museum of Nothing is actually quite interesting. The fact that nothingness has become an aesthetic element with distinctive features like beauty and ugliness brought the idea of ​​embodying the concept of nothingness to the minds of the founders of the museum. As all attempts to define, embody or represent nothingness have been inconclusive so far, they decided to reinterpret the paradox in question with this museum. The aim of the museum is to encourage visitors to question their aesthetic perception and productive thinking. On the four floors of the museum, each of which consists of two wings, there are works put forward for this purpose.

The founders of the Nothing Museum also decided to take the museum on tour in 2015 in order to spread the concept of “nothing” all over the world. With this mission, the museum has been traveling from continent to continent for years. He went to Central and Northern Europe in 2015, North America in 2016, and Central America in 2017. If you want to be in close contact with anything, if you happen to be in Zurich, you can stop by this museum.

13-Hearses Museum, Barcelona

There is so much to see and do in Barcelona. Gaudi, who left his mark on the city, is one of them, but the city also has some unknown but extremely interesting points. One of them is the Funeral Cars Museum. In the museum, where you can see various hearses from the 18th century to the present, the puppets seated in the carriages also have the clothes of the period.

Here, hearses decorated with various clothes are on display. The collection includes 13 hearses, 6 coaches and 3 motor vehicles to take families to church and cemetery. The museum provides an interesting insight into the development of burial rites as well as burials.

14-Milk Bottle Museum, Stanford-le-Hope

Paul Luke is a retired milkman and Paul, who was interested in this hobby at the age of 9, determined his profession in this direction when the time came. After a certain time, he had to build a museum in his backyard for the bottles he could not fit in his house. The oldest bottle in Paul’s collection dates from 1890, who has since exhibited the bottles in the museum. More than 10,000 milk bottles are exhibited in the Milk Museum. Besides, it is possible to find milkmaid uniforms, hats, badges and other tracksuits and clothes. The Milk Bottles Museum has set the world record for the largest collection of milk bottles.

15-Shin Yokohama Ramen Museum, Yokohama

Ramen (Japanese noodles), which is a part of Japanese food culture, has been extremely popular in the country since 1958, when it was put up for sale mixed into boiled water. So much so that there is a museum dedicated to ramen in Japan, which is famous all over the world. Along with ramen varieties, various recipes prepared with ramen are also exhibited in the museum.

16-Burnt Food Museum, USA

Founded by Harp Artist Deborah Henson Conant in the United States in the late 1980s, the Burnt Food Museum welcomes its visitors with a very interesting concept as a concept.

The idea, which started when Henson Conant burned the food he prepared for his friends, found color with the formation of the museum. In the museum; There are black dishes, burnt cakes, ash-colored toast, as well as burnt pans and pots.

17-Museum of French Fries, Belgium

The Friet Museum, the only known french fries museum in the world, operates as the Belgian people research the history of french fries and present them to their customers. In the museum, which is located in a building dating from the 14th century, the adventure of the potato from the Inca period to the present is presented with delicious treats.

18-Underwear Museum, Brussels

 

One of the most extravagant and original museums in the world is in Brussels. The Celebrities Underwear Museum presents visitors with literally the most sensual and provocative exhibits. In the museum, you can see the underwear of celebrities and politicians in show business. It is worth noting that all the clothes presented in the museum are not only in the possession of celebrities, but were also shot at least once.

19-International Espionage Museum, Washington

Located in Washington, the heart of the United States, the International Spy Museum is especially ideal for those who are interested in action and adventure-filled spy films and science fiction novels. From miniature cameras to radio receivers, from hidden weapons to meeting places, there is nothing missing in this museum. The museum’s film archive, which has an extremely rich collection, is further enriched with historical photographs and objects and toys from current agent films.

The museum also has an event calendar where exhibitions or shows on special themes such as James Bond are displayed.

If you want to join an agent adventure along with the museum tour, you can have this experience by purchasing a combined ticket.

20-Museum of Experiments, St. Petersburg

The world’s first types of genetic experiments are exhibited at the Kunstkamera Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia. Kunstkamera, considered the first museum of Russia, was founded by Tsar Peter. Kunstkamera means ‘Room of Curiosities’. Czar Petro carried out his studies of genetic science bringing anatomy expert Dr.Ruysch from the Netherlands. The genetic experiments Dr.Ruysch performed 300 years ago are displayed in jars.

21-Mummy Museum, Guanajuato, Mexico

Guanajuato, where the museum is located, is also a provincial capital on the UNESCO World Heritage List. At the Mummy Museum, you can always find a tiny dead child’s body sitting cross-legged in front of you. Moreover, the mummification process here attracts twice as much attention as it occurs naturally due to the climatic conditions of the region.

In the 19th century, people in this ancient city had to pay taxes every year for their burial sites. No matter how interesting it is to exhume those whose taxes are not paid; It is so interesting that the poor bodies that came out of the grave were never intact! Thus, dozens of mummies discovered under the ground paved the way for the Mummy Museum. Bodies from the 19th century, in almost all their originality, are gruesomely present in the Mummy Museum.

22-Cancun Underwater Museum, Mexico

Also known as the Caribbean of Mexico, Cancun is an extremely popular tourist destination around the world. You can also find one of the most interesting underwater museums in the world in Cancun. Of course, to witness this magnificent visual feast closely; You’ll need to go underwater, such as by snorkeling or scuba diving.

Different ways to visit the museum, which is abbreviated as MUSA, have been considered for those who do not trust themselves and their breathing under the sea. Glass-covered boats are open to visitors of all ages and walks of life.

23-Penis Museum, Iceland

In Reykjavik, the capital of Iceland, there is one of the most interesting museums in the world, its name is the Icelandic Penis Museum. The penises of more than 200 creatures living on land and in water are the subject of this museum. Every size of penis is available in this museum, with many examples of whales, elephants and even humans you can think of.

The founder of the museum, Sigurdur Hjartarson, opened this museum to the public in 1990, based on the animal penises he has accumulated since 1974. In the promotion of the museum; It is stated that the first object kept by the collector belonged to a bull. In addition, there are whale sperm and ethnographic penis figures preserved by various methods in the museum, which is decorated with phalic items.

24-Historical Vibrators Museum, San Francisco

This museum opened by Joani Blank in San Francisco has been hosting its guests for more than 20 years. Joani Blank, the founder of the museum, which is considered the first of its kind, exhibits all the antique vibrators sent by her relatives in the  San Francisco Polk Street store.

The items in the collection date from the late 1800s to the 1970s. Dozens of electric vibrator styles have been presented, first to medical professionals, then to everyone, just like the ones in our exhibition.

25-International Toilet Museum, New Delhi

The museum has a rare collection of facts, pictures and objects detailing the historical evolution of toilets from 2500 BC to the present day. It provides a chronological account of developments in technology, toilet-related social customs, toilet etiquette, prevailing sanitary conditions, and legislative efforts of different times. It has a large display of toilets, potties, toilet furniture, bidets and closets used from 1145 AD to modern times. It also has a rare collection of beautiful poems about toilets and their uses.

The paintings exhibited in the museum make people realize what the world was like when societies could not benefit from toilet bowls (WC) and the changes brought about by his invention. It also shows how the Roman emperors had toilet bowls made of gold and silver.

The museum is suitable for doctors, nurses, school students, planners, Government Officials, anthropologists, engineers, scientists, designers, etc. It receives a daily flow of visitors from India and abroad.

26-Cockroach Museum, Texas

You can come across thousands of ‘cockroach art’ in this museum, which was founded by pesticide expert Michael Bohdan. Michael Bohdan decorated these pests in such a way that; the cockroaches were truly spectacular. Nicknamed each of them, Michael Bohdan dressed some of his bugs for the beach environment and put some of them in front of the mini piano.

When you need a special itinerary to see these extraordinary museums with interesting themes, our team will be happy to assist you.

Considering your safety and comfort, contact us now to book a private plane for the time interval you request!

No matter where in the world your Private Plane trip is, you will have a pleasant flight and an amazing experience!

We wish you pleasant travels…

 

+90 850 885 05 20