Salar Jung Museum

Salar Jung Museum

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The Salar Jung Museum is an art museum located at Darushifa, on the southern bank of the Musi River

Photos 15/07/2017

Collection of swords at Salar Jung Museum

Photos 26/04/2017
Photos from Salar Jung Museum's post 26/03/2017

Founded in 1951, the Salar Jung Museum is situated on the
southern bank of the Musi River in the city of Hyderabad, Telangana, India. Comparable to London’s Victoria & Albert Museum, this collection is vast to say the least. From sculptures to
paintings, carvings, manuscripts, ceramics, textiles, carpets, metalwork, clocks, and furniture from all over the world, the Salar Jung is the third largest of India’s museums, housing many of India’s most
important treasures.

Mir Yousuf Ali Khan (otherwise referred to as Salar Jung III) came from the noble Salar Jung family, from which five members had served as Prime Ministers to the Nizams, who ruled the state of Hyderabad from 1720 to 1948. Salar Jung III’s grandfather, Mir Turab Ali Khan, was awarded a family title at the age of 13. He was thus known as Salar Jung I and later became Prime Minister at the age of 24. Known for his reforms and excellent administration, Salar Jung I was a great lover of art, which had a lasting influence on his family – including his grandson — whom he never met, but who would go on to collect the vast majority of the artefacts available on display today.

Salar Jung III was merely 24 days old when his father died. At the age of ten, he was granted the family title of Salar Jung Bahadur, which later made him Prime Minister. But in November 1914, Salar Jung III relinquished his post. It was from that point onwards that Salar Jung III dedicated his life to enriching his collection.

Upon Salar Jung III’s death in 1949, the Government of India appointed a committee to administer the Salar Jung Estate; given that he died childless there was no one else to continue the maintenance of this extraordinary collection. The Museum was officially founded in 1951 in Diwan Devdi, the residential palace of the Salar Jung family which had 78 rooms and a large number of different buildings on the grounds. Initially opened as a private museum, the current collection contains only half of the original wealth of artefacts obtained by Salar Jung III. The whereabouts of the missing pieces are unknown.

In 1958, it was decided that the Government would take over the museum, which had previously been maintained by the Salar Jung Estate Committee. This was somewhat of a compromise, and in 1961 there was an Act of Parliament declaring the Salar Jung Museum and its library as an Institution of National Importance. The administration at this point was then transferred to an Autonomous Board, with the Governor of Andhra Pradesh as its Chairman. In 1968, the museum was moved from Dewan Devdi to its present site of Afzalgunj, Andhra Pradesh; through this move, more works of art went missing – either lost or stolen.

Despite this upheaval, what remains of Salar Jung III’s original collection is still vast and impressive. Throughout his life, it is believed that Salar Jung III collected some 43,000 artifacts and 50,000 books and manuscripts. Unfortunately, only a few of these remain on display in today’s museum. Amongst Salar Jung III’s collections are many important works by the artist Raja Ravi Varma, considered one of the greatest painters in the history of Indian art. Known for fusing Indian artistic traditions with the techniques of European academic art, Varma gained his recognition from his depictions of scenes from the Sanskrit epics of the Mahabharata and the Ramayana (often compared to the Bible, Qu’ran, works of Homer and Shakespeare with regards to cultural importance).
In addition to the extensive painting collections, the artifacts on display give an indication of the wealth of craftsmanship that has existed around the globe for centuries; exquisite textiles from the Middle East, ornamental jade carvings from Indian Emperors, ceramics from Sino-Japan, and glass and furniture from Europe. So for a truly comprehensive look at history and art, be sure to pay a visit to the Salar Jung Museum.

Photos 20/03/2017

Salar Jung Museum of Hyderabad is the third largest museum in India. It was declared open in the year of 1951 by the first prime minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru. In the year of 1968, the entire collection was shifted to the present building.

Photos from Salar Jung Museum's post 14/03/2017

Marble statues in Salarjung Musuem

Photos from Salar Jung Museum's post 10/03/2017

The Salar Jung Museum possesses a good number of clocks collected from different European countries such as France, England, Switzerland, Germany, Holland etc. The variety includes the Bird cage clocks, Bracket clocks, Grandfather clocks, Skeleton clocks, etc. The museum is also having some good examples of the clocks of the contemporary period of Louis XV, Louis XVI, and Napoleon 1st of France. The most important clock which attracts the greatest number of visitors everyday is however, a British Bracket clock. It has got a mechanical device by which a miniature toy figure comes out of an enclosure and strikes the gong and then returns to the enclosure at each hour.

Photos 09/03/2017

collection of swords

08/03/2017

The Salar Jung Museum houses the largest one-man collection of antiques in the world. It is well known throughout India for its prized collections belonging to different civilizations dating back to the 1st century. Nawab Mir Yusuf Ali Khan Salar Jung III (1889–1949), former Prime Minister of the seventh Nizam of Hyderabad, spent a substantial amount of his income over thirty five years to make this priceless collection, his life's passion.

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Salar Jung Road, Darulshifa
Hyderabad
500002