The Hong Kong Museum of History

Even amidst the futuristic sights and sounds of Hong Kong, its ancient past can still resonate. Many modern cities possess this contradiction of a rich history that contrasts her modern times. Hong Kong is no exception. And its artifacts are preserved perfectly at the Hong Kong Museum of History.

 

As a matter of fact, the museum itself is a contradiction. To document and preserve Hong Kong's history and cultural heritage, there are a plethora of vigilantly selected artifacts, shown along interactive videos and computers. It is a curious mix of technology and ancient human history. Yet the curiosity doesn't stop with its human history. There is even a preliminary exhibition demonstrating the geological formation and the development of natural life across the Hong Kong harbor, some 400 million years ago. In vast interactive rooms, visitors can become privy to the previous residents of Hong Kong - her tigers and black bears along with exhibits of primordial Chinese human beings.

Moving ahead, there are vast collections of earthenware, jewelery, and other objects that all give an idea of the first civilization of Hong Kong established around 2000 B.C. There are also vibrant recreations of daily Chinese life exhibited along with life in the Ming and Qing dynasties that give details of the mass resettlements to Hong Kong.

Yet most of the museum is dedicated to Hong Kong's recent British colonial period. A sense of realism and nostalgia is overwhelming in these recreations. The museum has created street scenes like theatre designs. Here, the audience can walk through these detailed exhibits and wholly experience all the sensations of the period. All the displays provide the visitor with a good sense of times past, an opportunity to just look back in time. And what better way is there, to look back into time, than a photograph? The museum has its fair share of century-old photographs of Hong Kong street life for this very purpose.

There are even exhibits of the tragedies of Hong Kong - both man-made and natural disasters. There are details of the Opium Wars, Sun Yat-Sen's policies and even the Japanese occupation, complete with an air raid shelter with sound effects.

Yet what is the history of Hong Kong without her ultramodern skyscrapers and her leap into modern times? Yes, there are film clips detailing this development as well.

The entire essence of Hong Kong's modernism has given her past so much value. Thus, the museum is really worth the visit. Almost everything that is Hong Kong, as far back as human imagination can go, has its traces in this museum. It will fascinate visitors with its rich history and innovative methods.

And how do you get there? The subway system would be the most convenient way to get to the museum. You can take the MTR to Tsim Sha Tsui. Take exit B2 and walk down Cameron Road. Or there is the Star Ferry from the Central district after which you can then board the bus. The museum is at 100, Chatham Road South, adjacent to the Hong Kong Science Museum.



 

Hong Kong Recommended Products


Language Culture Thought News

Selling the Humanities During Economic Crisis

One idea that elite universities like Yale, sprawling public systems like Wisconsin and smaller private colleges like Lewis and Clark have shared for generations is that a traditional liberal arts education is, by definition, not intended to prepare students for a specific vocati …

Read more...


Jonathan Franzen: Screen idol - Telegraph.co.uk


Telegraph.co.uk

Jonathan Franzen: Screen idol
Telegraph.co.uk
Sorry: back to not engaging with the culture. I realised that I had this kind of dumb idea about what fiction could do and should do. I thought I was writing novels that would enlighten people. I mean, I was doing other things, I was trying to ...

Read more...


Cultural Highs And Lows For Iran - Voice of America


Cultural Highs And Lows For Iran
Voice of America
The Iranian domestic drama, “A Separation,” has won the prestigious Golden Globe award from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for best foreign language film. Written and directed by Asghar Farhadi, “A Separation” is now in contention for two ...

and more »

Read more...


Jacqueline Rose: a life in writing - The Guardian


The Guardian

Jacqueline Rose: a life in writing
The Guardian
"I thought 'This is ridiculous – she'd have woken up by now!' I had my feminist reaction – which is not my most obvious default position – which is just let the woman speak." So Rose decided to awaken Proust's lover from her implausible slumber.

Read more...


The Difference Between Online Knowledge and Truly Open Knowledge - The Atlantic


The Atlantic

The Difference Between Online Knowledge and Truly Open Knowledge
The Atlantic
By CW Anderson Liberation from the bounds of books and libraries doesn't mean freedom from the constraints of corporate power and culture. A response to David Weinberger's Too Big to Know. In Too Big To Know: Rethinking Knowledge Now that the Facts ...

and more »

Read more...



Sponsored Links

 

 

Site Navigation