Search

Search

  1. The monk and the manuscript (26.03.2026)

    Not much is known about the Benedictine monk Ranulf Higden (c. 1280–1364) from Chester. Yet he was one of the most famous English scholars of the late Middle Ages and the author of an extensive world chronicle. Now, two researchers at the Berlin State Library – Prussian Cultural Heritage have made a

  2. What Adams’ card index tells us (26.03.2026)

    Did autographs from the collection of David Salomon, an antiquarian murdered in Auschwitz in 1943, enter the Adam Collection lawfully? A provenance research project is investigating whether there is any Nazi-looted property in the Gedächtnis Preußen collection

  3. Research Questions: How should we deal with a sensitive legacy? (26.03.2026)

    Ludger Derenthal and Katrin Peters-Klaphake from the Museum of Photography are responsible for managing Leni Riefenstahl’s photographic archive. Here, the researchers answer your questions:

  4. I bleed, therefore I am (26.03.2026)

    The exhibition “Läuft” at the MEK examines menstruation as a cultural phenomenon. Writer Julia Völcker visited the exhibition – and was surprised by the taboos and stigmas that persist to this day.

  5. A defence of one’s cultural heritage as well (26.03.2026)

    Under the patronage of Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the exhibition “From Odessa to Berlin: European Painting from the 16th to the 19th Century” opened at the Gemäldegalerie

  6. The monk and the manuscript (26.03.2026)

    Not much is known about the Benedictine monk Ranulf Higden (c. 1280–1364) from Chester. Yet he was one of the most famous English scholars of the late Middle Ages and the author of an extensive world chronicle. Now, two researchers at the Berlin State Library – Prussian Cultural Heritage have made a

  7. What Adams’ card index tells us (26.03.2026)

    Did autographs from the collection of David Salomon, an antiquarian murdered in Auschwitz in 1943, enter the Adam Collection lawfully? A provenance research project is investigating whether there is any Nazi-looted property in the Gedächtnis Preußen collection

  8. Research Questions: How should we deal with a sensitive legacy? (26.03.2026)

    Ludger Derenthal and Katrin Peters-Klaphake from the Museum of Photography are responsible for managing Leni Riefenstahl’s photographic archive. Here, the researchers answer your questions:

  9. I bleed, therefore I am (26.03.2026)

    The exhibition “Läuft” at the MEK examines menstruation as a cultural phenomenon. Writer Julia Völcker visited the exhibition – and was surprised by the taboos and stigmas that persist to this day.

  10. A defence of one’s cultural heritage as well (26.03.2026)

    Under the patronage of Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the exhibition “From Odessa to Berlin: European Painting from the 16th to the 19th Century” opened at the Gemäldegalerie