Regensburg Museum of Danube Shipping
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The Regensburg Museum of Danube Shipping (''Donau-Schiffahrts-Museum Regensburg'') is a maritime museum of river shipping on the
river Danube The Danube ( ; ) is a river that was once a long-standing frontier of the Roman Empire and today connects 10 European countries, running through their territories or being a border. Originating in Germany, the Danube flows southeast for , pa ...
and other rivers, sited in the town of Regensburg in
Germany Germany,, officially the Federal Republic of Germany, is a country in Central Europe. It is the second most populous country in Europe after Russia, and the most populous member state of the European Union. Germany is situated betwe ...
. It also contains art collections on that topic, along with material on boatmen's work and training. Its main exhibits are the steam tugboat ''Ruthof / Érsekcsanád'' and the diesel tug ''Freudenau''.


History of the museum

Although there were earlier approaches to founding a shipping museum in Regensburg, the club Arbeitskreis Schiffahrts-Museum Regensburg e. V. was founded 19th of January 1979 in response to the threatened scrapping of the Hungarian steam boat Érsekcsanád, constructed in Regensburg in 1923 under the name Ruthof. After overcoming numerous difficulties, the club purchased from the Hungarian shipping company Mahart on August 21., 1979 for 40.000DM. In October the ship was brought to Deggendorf for conservation before arriving in Regensburg on November 4, 1980. After the ship was suitably set up, the museum's opening ceremony took place on the 10th of May, 1983. However, the interior was only completed in 1984. In the bow cabin of the Ruthof/Érsekcsanád, the development of shipping on the Danube is explained via numerous signs and models. However, the most important exhibit is the ship itself. The oil bunker, boiler room, and machine room as well as the technical furnishing on deck, the bridge, the ship's kitchen, and the crew's accommodation can be viewed. This allows for a complete insight of work and living conditions on a ship of this kind. In 1987 the accompaniment of the former shipping passage at Steinerne Brueke was transferred to the club. In 1995 the club purchased the former motorized tugboat Freudenau. Built in 1941 in Linz, it was already equipped with diesel propulsion. In contrast to Ruthof / Érsekcsanád, on which some changes in construction had to be carried out to house the museum rooms, Freudenau was presented practically in the same state as at its decommission in 1993. The museum was originally located on Werftstraße am Unteren Wöhrd. In 2004 it was relocated to a more central location. Since then, the berth of the Ruthof / Érsekcsanád and the Freudenau is located at the southern (right) shore between the Iron Bridge and the Stone Bridge (Marc-Aurel-Ufer, Thundorferstraße).


History of the ships


''Ruthof / Érsekcsanád''


''Freudenau''


External links


Museum homepage
{{Authority control Maritime museums in Germany Museums in Regensburg Museum ships in Germany 1979 establishments in Germany