Cabinet of curiosities  

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'''Cabinets of curiosities''' (also known as '''Wunderkammer''' or '''wonder-rooms''') were collections of types of objects we now regard as quite separate, but whose boundaries were in the Renaissance yet to be defined. They included specimens we would now categorise as belonging to [[natural history]] (sometimes faked), [[geology]], [[ethnography]], [[archaeology]], religious or historical [[relic]]s, works of art, including [[cabinet painting]]s, and antiquities. Some belonged to rulers, aristocrats or merchants, others to early practitioners of [[science]] in [[Europe]], and were precursors to [[museum]]s of different sorts. '''Cabinets of curiosities''' (also known as '''Wunderkammer''' or '''wonder-rooms''') were collections of types of objects we now regard as quite separate, but whose boundaries were in the Renaissance yet to be defined. They included specimens we would now categorise as belonging to [[natural history]] (sometimes faked), [[geology]], [[ethnography]], [[archaeology]], religious or historical [[relic]]s, works of art, including [[cabinet painting]]s, and antiquities. Some belonged to rulers, aristocrats or merchants, others to early practitioners of [[science]] in [[Europe]], and were precursors to [[museum]]s of different sorts.
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Cabinets of curiosities (also known as Wunderkammer or wonder-rooms) were collections of types of objects we now regard as quite separate, but whose boundaries were in the Renaissance yet to be defined. They included specimens we would now categorise as belonging to natural history (sometimes faked), geology, ethnography, archaeology, religious or historical relics, works of art, including cabinet paintings, and antiquities. Some belonged to rulers, aristocrats or merchants, others to early practitioners of science in Europe, and were precursors to museums of different sorts.



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