Exhibition at the Josephinum

The renovation of the Josephinum has offered the opportunity to conceive and create a completely new exhibition. After a break of almost four years, the institution is presenting itself as a museum of medical history with exhibition space of almost 1,000 m2, stretching over two floors.

On the first floor, seven rooms are dedicated to the world-famous anatomical wax models that were bought by Emperor Joseph II in Florence. We exhibit them in their original historical form and present the history of the building in the 18th century.

The concept for the ground floor entails parallel use as a university collection store and a customizable exhibition space that focuses on objects and themes in connection with the development of medicine since the 19th century, including the darkest hours in the time of National Socialism. Today’s high-tech medicine and current debates about bioethics are also covered.

We show many magnificent objects, instruments, pictures, documents and books from past centuries that have great medical and historical significance and offer insights into science and medicine with a focus on Vienna. Among the highlights of the exhibition are the collection of surgical instruments that Giovanni Alessandro Brambilla, personal physician to the emperor and the first director of the Josephinum, commissioned as a model collection for the education of trainee surgeons. Another exhibit is the world’s first endoscope, from 1806, which was developed by Philipp Bozzini and purchased by Emperor Franz I for the “Joseph Academy of Military Surgery”, as well as the Gall Skull with its markings developed by Franz Joseph Gall to show the areas of the brain, along with documents such as a handwritten résumé by Sigmund Freud and the file with which Empress Elisabeth was murdered in Geneva. Much of what is now displayed in the Josephinum has never before been shown to the public!

The renovation of the Josephinum has offered the opportunity to conceive and create a completely new exhibition. After a break of almost four years, the institution is presenting itself as a museum of medical history with exhibition space of almost 1,000 m2, stretching over two floors.

On the first floor, seven rooms are dedicated to the world-famous anatomical wax models that were bought by Emperor Joseph II in Florence. We exhibit them in their original historical form and present the history of the building in the 18th century.

The concept for the ground floor entails parallel use as a university collection store and a customizable exhibition space that focuses on objects and themes in connection with the development of medicine since the 19th century, including the darkest hours in the time of National Socialism. Today’s high-tech medicine and current debates about bioethics are also covered.

We show many magnificent objects, instruments, pictures, documents and books from past centuries that have great medical and historical significance and offer insights into science and medicine with a focus on Vienna. Among the highlights of the exhibition are the collection of surgical instruments that Giovanni Alessandro Brambilla, personal physician to the emperor and the first director of the Josephinum, commissioned as a model collection for the education of trainee surgeons. Another exhibit is the world’s first endoscope, from 1806, which was developed by Philipp Bozzini and purchased by Emperor Franz I for the “Joseph Academy of Military Surgery”, as well as the Gall Skull with its markings developed by Franz Joseph Gall to show the areas of the brain, along with documents such as a handwritten résumé by Sigmund Freud and the file with which Empress Elisabeth was murdered in Geneva. Much of what is now displayed in the Josephinum has never before been shown to the public!

Highlights

Es werden viele der prachtvollen medizinhistorisch bedeutenden Objekte, Instrumente, Bilder, Dokumente und Bücher aus den letzten Jahrhunderten gezeigt, die die Wissenschaft und Medizin mit dem Schwerpunkt Wien präsentieren. Zu den Highlights der Ausstellung gehören: die chirurgische Instrumentensammlung, die Giovanni Alessandro Brambilla, Leibarzt des Kaisers und erster Direktor des Hauses, als Muster für die ausgebildeten Chirurgen anfertigen ließ. Das erste Endoskop der Welt aus 1806, das von Philipp Bozzini entwickelt und von Kaiser Franz I. für die militär-chirurgische Josephs-Akademie angekauft wurde, wird ebenso ausgestellt wie der berühmte Gall´sche Schädel, mit der von Franz Joseph Gall entwickelten Einteilung des Gehirns in Areale, sowie Dokumente, wie ein handgeschriebener Lebenslauf von Sigmund Freud oder die Feile mit der Kaiserin Elisabeth in Genf ermordet wurde. Vieles, was jetzt im Josephinum zu sehen ist, wurde bislang noch nie der Öffentlichkeit gezeigt!

Recent Exhibitions | Josephinum