Visit the Decorative Arts Museum in Strasbourg
Museums[3 out of 9 museums of your choice in the City of Strasbourg by Pass] The decorative arts collections trace the diversity and evolution of Strasbourg's applied arts from 1681 to 1870, particularly in the areas of furniture, ceramics, clocks and silverware. The museum also presents a selection of mechanical toys from the Tomi Ungerer donation.
The prestigious palace of the cardinals of Rohan and the arts in Strasbourg in the 18th and 19th centuries, with the famous Hannong earthenware dishes. The Museum of Decorative Arts is housed on the ground floor of the Rohan Palace. The former residence of the four cardinals of Rohan, bishops and princes of Strasbourg, was built from 1732 to 1742 on the plans of architect Robert de Cotte.
Horaires d'ouverture
Open every day except Tuesday
From 10am to 1pm and from 2pm to 6pm on weekdays
From 10am to 6pm on weekends
Closed on 1 January, Good Friday, 1 May, 1 and 11 November and 25 December.
Visit the Archaelogical Museum in Strasbourg
[3 out of 9 museums of your choice in the City of Strasbourg by Pass] The museum's collections have been housed in the basement of the Palais Rohan since the end of the 19th century. Their variety and broad chronological scope make it one of the most important archaeological museums in France. You will discover the history of Strasbourg and Alsace, from the earliest prehistoric times to the first centuries of the Middle Ages.
Visit the Fine Arts Museum in Strasbourg
[3 out of 9 museums of your choice in the City of Strasbourg by Pass] The Musée des Beaux-Arts presents an exceptional panorama of the history of painting in Europe from the Middle Ages to 1870: Italian and Flemish primitives (Giotto, Memling); the Renaissance and Mannerism (Botticelli, Raphael); the golden age of Dutch painting and the great names of Flemish painting (Rubens, Van Dyck); Baroque, Classicism and Naturalism in the 17th and 18th centuries (Vouet, Canaletto, Goya); Romanticism and Realism in the 19th century (Corot, Courbet). (Corot, Courbet).
Museum of Decorative Arts
The Museum of Decorative Arts is housed on the ground floor of the Rohan Palace. The prestigious palace of the cardinals of Rohan and the arts in Strasbourg in the 18th and 19th centuries, with the famous Hannong earthenware dishes.
Accès Bus
Bus : lignes 14 et 24 arrêt Ancienne Douane
Accès en tram
Tram : ligne A et D arrêt Langstross Grand'Rue
Accès voiture
Dépose minute à l’Ancienne Douane et places de parking au Quai au Sable. Accès à la cour du Palais sur demande.
Handicap moteur
Accessible en fauteuil roulant (actionnez la sonnette du portail du Palais Rohan pour s'adresser à la loge, à droite sous le porche)
Rohan palace
The Rohan Palace in Strasbourg was built from 1732 to 1742 according to plans by Robert de Cotte, First Architect to the King, for Cardinal Armand-Gaston de Rohan-Soubise, Prince-Bishop of Strasbourg. Designed on the model of the great Parisian hotels, the Episcopal Palace of Strasbourg is one of the most beautiful architectural achievements of the French 18th century, both for the noble and classical elevation of its facades and for its sumptuous interior decorations. Built, decorated and furnished in the space of ten years, this sumptuous residence, which has remained almost unchanged since its construction, is distinguished by its exceptional unity of style. The city's Fine Arts Museum moved there in 1889, followed by the Archaeological Museum in 1913 and the Decorative Arts Museum in 1924.