Melissa B.
Yelp
The inside of this building is dramatic, stately, and awe-inspiring. I was hooked when I entered, and the admission price is reasonable!
Our first stop was the top/upper floor. The museum is ostensibly categorized into three sections, two of which are upstairs. In this section, I was interested, but the modern section on the ground floor was really where I felt an impact. Upstairs, of the two sections, one was a comprehensive look at the Napoleonic era, as well as some time before or after, including mid-1800s nationalism. In my view, and this is just mine, there could have been a bit more thematically here to tie the detailed exhibits and maps together. There were larger placards (in English and German) that explained immediate context in a helpful way, but larger-scale explanations needed "beefing up." This era can be quite confusing for some: monarch names are repetitive and similar, kingdoms switched around/disintegrated/coalesced, and many countries we now know well were in no way the same at that time. It was such a time of change, in terms of borders and "who had power when," so it might confuse some people.
Less successful was the other section of this floor, the 16th-18th (I think?) century areas. Trust me, as a history person, I have the utmost respect for the careful and detailed level of historic preservation of the artifacts, and it's not lost on me how cool it is to see such old items "in the flesh." I apologize for sounding selfish here, but this section has noticeably older placards and information, and very little in English. I don't want to sound entitled, but English is a lingua franca in many places, as well as a language many speak when they need to have one in common for conversation, business, etc. It also didn't fit with the robust levels of English translation elsewhere in the museum. My guess is that the museum will do this for this section of the floor, but it hasn't gotten around to it yet, going section-by-section across all three.
The ground floor was where the most modern exhibit was. I love 20th century history (OK, anything post-Renaissance), so I was ready to dig into some World War I info. I already knew that this museum contained THE car where Franz Ferdinand was assassinated. That didn't stop me from being positively awed by its existence when I turned the corner and saw it. No, this assassination in June 1914 didn't start WWI by itself, given the myriad factors that led to it and had been "brewing" for some time. But this was the most immediate cause and a majorly dramatic, consequential event, so seeing the original car (not a replica) in person was mind-blowing. So too was gazing upon the emperor's actual clothing he wore that day, complete with the fateful bullet hole.
The rest of the floor is packed with chronological organization of WWI artifacts, from enormous airplanes and missile launchers to uniforms and weapons. Many countries are featured here, artifact-wise, including some that ceased to exist because of (or just after) this "war to end all wars." It would be nice to have some WWII artifacts here, though it might be a space issue. I hope it's not a matter of being hesitant to acknowledge Austria's Nazi collaboration and capitulation, but the museum seemed to treat history in an honest, detailed manner for other wars, so I would assume the best here.