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Established | 22 October 1806 |
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Location | 2, côte de la Fabrique Quebec City,Quebec G1R 3V6 |
Type | National Historic Site of Canada |
Website | www |
TheMusée de l'Amérique francophone (Museum of French-Speaking America), formerly theMusée de l'Amérique française, is situated in theOld Quebec neighbourhood ofQuebec City,Quebec, Canada. It is Canada's oldest museum. Its collection contains books fromSéminaire de Québec's library, some of which were published in the 16th century and others which were placed in a restricted section called Enfer ('Hell' in French). It also contains artifacts from Cyprus, paintings, first-edition publications ofThe Birds of America andEncyclopédie, and a recreation of the organ fromCathedral-Basilica of Notre-Dame de Québec. The museum's collection has been managed by theMusée de la civilisation since 1995.
The museum opened on 22 October 1806 as Musée du Séminaire and is the oldest museum in Canada.[1] In 1993, Musée du Séminaire changed its name to Musée de l'Amérique française.[1] In 1995, the museum became part of theMusée de la civilisation.[2] In 2013 the museum was renamed to Musée de l'Amérique francophone as part of Musée de la civilisation's campaign to modernise its image.[3]
The museum is located besideSéminaire de Québec inQuebec City. In 1838,Thomas Baillairgé created blueprints for the museum's building, including its round facade. The former chapel, called Chapelle du Musée de l'Amérique francophone, is attached to the building. It is designated as a religious heritage site and now serves as a conference centre and hall. The museum is part of theMusée de la civilisation complex.[1]
In 1991, the museum documented about 110,000 pieces in its collection. When the museum opened, it contained objects that helped in science education. The collection also contains coins, stamps, fossils, paintings, statues, prints, books, gold andsilverware.[1]
The museum's archives were listed inMemory of the World Register in 2007. Some of the museum's archives and rare books are located at the French America Reference Centre within the museum.[1]
The collection includes artifacts fromCyprus, with 40 pieces donated byJean Des Gagniers in 1966 and 60 donated byLouis-Albert Vachon in 1991. The artifacts are from theNeolithic to theMedieval periods and include items made from ceramic materials and a sculpture.[4]
The museum has paintings byJoseph Légaré,Marc-Aurèle de Foy Suzor-Coté andJean Paul Lemieux.[1] It also contains a four-volume copy of the first edition ofThe Birds of America byJohn James Audubon[5] and a copy ofEncyclopédie.[6] A copy of the firstbook of hours produced byHenri III of France for hisconfraternity is also in the museum's collection.[7]
In 2009Juget-Sinclair built a chapel organ for the museum.[8] The organ is a reconstruction of the organ built for theCathedral-Basilica of Notre-Dame de Québec in 1753, but destroyed in 1759. It was installed on the museum's balcony at the second floor of the building's interior.[9]
In 1964, whenUniversité Laval moved to the Quebec City neighbourhood ofSainte-Foy–Sillery–Cap-Rouge, the university split Séminaire de Québec and donated all pre-1920 books and books from the collection's forbidden section, known asEnfer (Inferno), to the museum.[10] The collection contains 603monographs, mostly printed in the 18th and 19th centuries. About half of the monographs are printed in French, a quarter in English and the remaining in other languages. The collection also contains over 900 leaflets and brochures.[10] These books include texts from the 16th century and the accounts of explorers from the 17th and 18th centuries.[1] Some of the books contain notes written by members of Séminaire de Québec explaining why the book was placed in the Enfer section. Some of the Enfer books contain redactions, erasures, ink stains, and explanations of the book's errors. The collection also contains letters from bishops or religious leaders that reject or grant permission for people to read the Enfer books.[10]
46°48′51″N71°12′24″W / 46.81417°N 71.20667°W /46.81417; -71.20667