Gallo-Romeins Museum
Gallo-Romeins Museum
4.5
วันอังคาร
9:00 น. - 17:00 น.
วันพุธ
9:00 น. - 17:00 น.
วันพฤหัสบดี
9:00 น. - 17:00 น.
วันศุกร์
9:00 น. - 17:00 น.
วันเสาร์
10:00 น. - 18:00 น.
วันอาทิตย์
10:00 น. - 18:00 น.
ข้อมูล
ระยะเวลา: 1-2 ชั่วโมง
แนะนำให้แก้ไขเพื่อปรับปรุงสิ่งที่เราแสดง
ปรับปรุงข้อมูลสถานที่ให้บริการนี้มุมมองเต็มรูปแบบ
Travellers' Choice คืออะไร
Tripadvisor มอบรางวัล Travellers’ Choice ให้กับที่พัก สถานที่ท่องเที่ยว และร้านอาหารที่ได้รับรีวิวยอดเยี่ยมอย่างต่อเนื่องจากนักท่องเที่ยวและได้รับการจัดอันดับอยู่ใน 10% แรกของสถานที่ให้บริการยอดนิยมบน Tripadvisor
พื้นที่
ที่อยู่
ติดต่อโดยตรง
สถานที่ใกล้เคียงที่ดีที่สุด
ร้านอาหาร
123 ภายใน 5 กม.
สถานที่ท่องเที่ยว
43 ภายใน 10 กม.
มีส่วนร่วม
4.5
659 รีวิว
ดีเยี่ยม
346
ดีมาก
239
ธรรมดา
56
แย่
14
แย่มาก
4
รีวิวเหล่านี้ได้รับการแปลจากภาษาต้นฉบับโดยอัตโนมัติ
บริการนี้อาจมีการแปลที่ได้รับการสนับสนุนจาก Google Google ปฏิเสธการรับประกันทั้งหมด ไม่ว่าโดยชัดแจ้งหรือโดยนัยใดๆ ที่เกี่ยวข้องกับการแปล รวมถึงการรับประกันความถูกต้อง ความน่าเชื่อถือใดๆ และการรับประกันโดยนัยใดๆ ในการใช้ประโยชน์เชิงพาณิชย์ ความเหมาะสมสำหรับวัตถุประสงค์อย่างใดอย่างหนึ่งเป็นการเฉพาะ และการเป็นอิสระจากการปลอมแปลง
not_the_george
ลอนดอน, UK30 ผลงาน
ส.ค. ค.ศ. 2024 • ครอบครัว
I am not usually one for museums with lots of ancient artefacts, as they are often not well explained. This museum chronologically works really well through archaeological finds in the area and their significance up from ancient times. to the Middle Ages. It works with an audio guide, videos and maps that really bring it all to life in a way I have not seen before. The audio guides have 3 options, kids (also good for adults to pick up the basics and move along more quickly), fairly detailed (around 1.5 hours, though very engaging!) and very detailed (maybe 2 hours). Highly recommend museum!
เขียนเมื่อ 1 สิงหาคม ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
Michel V
Bruxelles89 ผลงาน
ก.ค. ค.ศ. 2024 • ครอบครัว
Visit made yesterday with our little girls 7 and 11 years old. They really liked this very modern museum as well as the explanations of the audio guide (option child or adult). Very democratic entrance price and very nice welcome.
We spent 2 hours there.
Exhibition on the food of our ancestors with track game and tastings.
We spent 2 hours there.
Exhibition on the food of our ancestors with track game and tastings.
เขียนเมื่อ 31 กรกฎาคม ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
on4ajt
Leopoldsburg, เบลเยียม381 ผลงาน
ก.ค. ค.ศ. 2024 • คู่รัก
Gallo-Romeins Museum is situated is situated in the center of Tongeren the possible oldest city of Belgium. There is no parking facility in the direct surrounding of the museum but parking garages at walking distance. The wholemuseum is wheelchair accessible. There are 2 kinds of exhibition, a permanent and a temporary which may vary. If you are not able to return in short time and are interested in the temporary it is best to visit this one first and arrive early after opening so you there is still enough time to visit the permanent exhibition. Between/after the visit you can have lunch/a drink in the museum cafetaria which we can strongly recommend. The museum vist is also a good alternative activity on a rainy or recommended if you are interested in (very) ancient history.
เขียนเมื่อ 15 กรกฎาคม ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
Hanne1313
Wellen, เบลเยียม143 ผลงาน
ส.ค. ค.ศ. 2023 • ครอบครัว
We visited with our kids aged 7 and 8. The kids were very captivated. It is particularly nice that there is a children's tour and an adult tour that can be followed simultaneously. Convenient use of the headphones. Nice that extra DIY assignments are provided for the children. Extra was the 'out with the fly' assignment. That was also an added value for the kids. Eventually Mom and Dad had had enough, but the kids weren't ready to go home.
เขียนเมื่อ 13 กรกฎาคม ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
Rikke F
Auning, เดนมาร์ก253 ผลงาน
ก.ค. ค.ศ. 2024 • คู่รัก
We were through the permanent exhibition that takes us from the Neanderthal to the collapse of the Roman Empire.
It's the most comprehensive I've ever seen in the Neanderthals. Bone finds of wild horse, bison, wool-haired rhinoceros and mammoth cause it to bite in one, at the thought of having to lay it down by means of flint tools. The finds from Roman times were also extensive and tell the story of the time of greatness.
The only downside is that English communication is only available via audio guides. However, it seemed impeccable.
It's the most comprehensive I've ever seen in the Neanderthals. Bone finds of wild horse, bison, wool-haired rhinoceros and mammoth cause it to bite in one, at the thought of having to lay it down by means of flint tools. The finds from Roman times were also extensive and tell the story of the time of greatness.
The only downside is that English communication is only available via audio guides. However, it seemed impeccable.
เขียนเมื่อ 9 กรกฎาคม ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
Ben Verbruggen
Best, เนเธอร์แลนด์1,987 ผลงาน
พ.ค. ค.ศ. 2024 • คู่รัก
We had bought a city pass to visit all kinds of museums, etc., with some discount. This museum had 2 choices to visit but we went for the Neanderthals, Farmers and Romans.
The other choice was antiquity in color.
The explanation was extensive and clear, but if you want to read and listen to it in detail, you will need more time than 2 hours.
Using the headphones with audio is nice and works fine.
The museum café that is included is a nice place to relax and the sandwiches are delicious and very affordable.
The other choice was antiquity in color.
The explanation was extensive and clear, but if you want to read and listen to it in detail, you will need more time than 2 hours.
Using the headphones with audio is nice and works fine.
The museum café that is included is a nice place to relax and the sandwiches are delicious and very affordable.
เขียนเมื่อ 26 พฤษภาคม ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
Jothih
Turnhout, เบลเยียม151 ผลงาน
พ.ค. ค.ศ. 2024 • คู่รัก
The Gallo-Roman Museum had been on my and my friend's list to visit (again) for years. Last year we drove from Sint-Truiden to Tongeren during the blossom period, but unfortunately the museum was closed then. Yesterday we had more luck.
The museum is located in a very beautiful building that is a bit hidden, fortunately the signposts on the market square of Tongeren are clear.
Upon entering we were kindly welcomed by the staff at the counter.
I had renewed my museum pass especially for this trip and my friend bought tickets for both the permanent and the temporary exhibition. The price of €16 in total seemed reasonable to him.
We received a beautifully designed blue wristband as an admission ticket.
It was explained to us where we could pick up the audio guide and where we could start the tour, they advised us to start with the permanent exhibition.
Downstairs where you can pick up the audio guide there is also a toilet, lockers and coat racks. Nicely arranged. The man who handed out the audio guides also told us to start with the permanent exhibition and that the tour will take about 2 hours.
The audio guides worked well, were clean and were well signposted throughout the museum. Something that is unfortunately not self-evident in all museums. It's also nice that there are separate listening points for children.
Even before you enter the halls, the first thing you read is a quote from Marcus Aurelius “What follows is always related to what came before.” A very beautiful, well-chosen quote for this museum. It certainly made me curious.
For a Saturday afternoon it was quite quiet in the museum.
When it was a bit busier, there were wide passageways so that you don't bump into each other, which is good for people in wheelchairs. The tactile tables are also useful for the blind and partially sighted.
We don't have children ourselves, but it is certainly a good museum for families with children. There are several interactive places with screens, tactile tables and even a tent where children can crawl into.
The first room is very impressive with the arrangement of the statues and horses.
What struck me was that the texts on the signs were only in Dutch, so foreign visitors can only use the audio guide.
We were told that the visit takes about 2 hours on average, but we don't think this is correct. If you want to read, see, watch, listen, feel, etc. everything, it will take you at least 3 hours. In retrospect, we should have only listened to the fragments with a star (the highlights).
The videos were certainly interesting, but could often be shortened.
I understand that you want to make an overview per time period and how the objects change over time, but for example, spreading the blades so much across the museum and returning them so often seemed unnecessary to me. Then a display cabinet with an overview of the changes in blades would be more interesting and less time-consuming.
Everything was beautifully displayed, each object had space to be admired individually.
There were models of certain sites such as the burial mounds, but my friend was disappointed that there were no photos of the archaeological excavations of these sites and/or objects.
All in all, I thought the exhibition had a logical structure, although there were sometimes strange jumps in time.
Because the museum was so huge, we were not able to see everything. When we actually just arrived at the Gauls and Romans, we had less than an hour left.
The majority of the museum seems to focus on prehistory and the Iron and Bronze Ages and less on the Gallic and Roman periods. Actually, 'Tongeren city museum' or something similar would be a better name.
There is an excess of (the same) objects. The only really interesting things for me were the gold treasure and the sword. Although I was not able to get a good look at the Roman floor, the models there were beautifully made and the mosaic floor and wall drawing with peacocks were beautiful to look at.
We (or at least I, because I had already visited the museum as a child) had come especially for the temporary exhibition 'Ancient History in Colour', but because we had lost so much time dwelling on the stones and pots on the first floors, there was actually no time for this anymore. At 10 to 6 we quickly walked to the ground floor. A museum employee said she was already closing, but I said we would walk through quickly.
And we did that, walked quickly so that we could still see a glimpse of those beautiful images. Very unfortunate and of course €8 is expensive and a waste of money.
My friend bought the book of this exhibition (€ 30) so that we could admire the images on paper and at our leisure.
When paying for the book, he couldn't resist making a comment about it by saying "yes, I have to buy the book, because we weren't actually able to see the exhibition."
The shocked employee at the counter said: “Oops, then you may have arrived later.”
We arrived in Tongeren around 2 p.m., because of the ride we first had a drink on the market square, so we were probably in the museum around 3 p.m.
A map and/or brochure with more explanation of/about the museum would have been nice, then we would have had an idea of the size, because we had clearly underestimated that.
An indication of depths/periods on the walls would also help.
We were not the only visitors who had this in mind, there was another couple at the counter who noted that they had not been able to see everything. They received the answer that they could always come back tomorrow and that the wristband still served as an admission ticket.
They then said that they were not from the area and that it was not a matter of just coming up and down. For us, Tongeren is also a good hour and 15 minute drive, so it is not a trip to quickly repeat.
I personally looked for a bookmark in the museum shop, but only saw one with a mammoth on it and without a direct reference to the museum (I did not take it out of the box).
To end on a positive note: Jan Schepens looked good as Ambiorix and it was a clean museum.
The museum is located in a very beautiful building that is a bit hidden, fortunately the signposts on the market square of Tongeren are clear.
Upon entering we were kindly welcomed by the staff at the counter.
I had renewed my museum pass especially for this trip and my friend bought tickets for both the permanent and the temporary exhibition. The price of €16 in total seemed reasonable to him.
We received a beautifully designed blue wristband as an admission ticket.
It was explained to us where we could pick up the audio guide and where we could start the tour, they advised us to start with the permanent exhibition.
Downstairs where you can pick up the audio guide there is also a toilet, lockers and coat racks. Nicely arranged. The man who handed out the audio guides also told us to start with the permanent exhibition and that the tour will take about 2 hours.
The audio guides worked well, were clean and were well signposted throughout the museum. Something that is unfortunately not self-evident in all museums. It's also nice that there are separate listening points for children.
Even before you enter the halls, the first thing you read is a quote from Marcus Aurelius “What follows is always related to what came before.” A very beautiful, well-chosen quote for this museum. It certainly made me curious.
For a Saturday afternoon it was quite quiet in the museum.
When it was a bit busier, there were wide passageways so that you don't bump into each other, which is good for people in wheelchairs. The tactile tables are also useful for the blind and partially sighted.
We don't have children ourselves, but it is certainly a good museum for families with children. There are several interactive places with screens, tactile tables and even a tent where children can crawl into.
The first room is very impressive with the arrangement of the statues and horses.
What struck me was that the texts on the signs were only in Dutch, so foreign visitors can only use the audio guide.
We were told that the visit takes about 2 hours on average, but we don't think this is correct. If you want to read, see, watch, listen, feel, etc. everything, it will take you at least 3 hours. In retrospect, we should have only listened to the fragments with a star (the highlights).
The videos were certainly interesting, but could often be shortened.
I understand that you want to make an overview per time period and how the objects change over time, but for example, spreading the blades so much across the museum and returning them so often seemed unnecessary to me. Then a display cabinet with an overview of the changes in blades would be more interesting and less time-consuming.
Everything was beautifully displayed, each object had space to be admired individually.
There were models of certain sites such as the burial mounds, but my friend was disappointed that there were no photos of the archaeological excavations of these sites and/or objects.
All in all, I thought the exhibition had a logical structure, although there were sometimes strange jumps in time.
Because the museum was so huge, we were not able to see everything. When we actually just arrived at the Gauls and Romans, we had less than an hour left.
The majority of the museum seems to focus on prehistory and the Iron and Bronze Ages and less on the Gallic and Roman periods. Actually, 'Tongeren city museum' or something similar would be a better name.
There is an excess of (the same) objects. The only really interesting things for me were the gold treasure and the sword. Although I was not able to get a good look at the Roman floor, the models there were beautifully made and the mosaic floor and wall drawing with peacocks were beautiful to look at.
We (or at least I, because I had already visited the museum as a child) had come especially for the temporary exhibition 'Ancient History in Colour', but because we had lost so much time dwelling on the stones and pots on the first floors, there was actually no time for this anymore. At 10 to 6 we quickly walked to the ground floor. A museum employee said she was already closing, but I said we would walk through quickly.
And we did that, walked quickly so that we could still see a glimpse of those beautiful images. Very unfortunate and of course €8 is expensive and a waste of money.
My friend bought the book of this exhibition (€ 30) so that we could admire the images on paper and at our leisure.
When paying for the book, he couldn't resist making a comment about it by saying "yes, I have to buy the book, because we weren't actually able to see the exhibition."
The shocked employee at the counter said: “Oops, then you may have arrived later.”
We arrived in Tongeren around 2 p.m., because of the ride we first had a drink on the market square, so we were probably in the museum around 3 p.m.
A map and/or brochure with more explanation of/about the museum would have been nice, then we would have had an idea of the size, because we had clearly underestimated that.
An indication of depths/periods on the walls would also help.
We were not the only visitors who had this in mind, there was another couple at the counter who noted that they had not been able to see everything. They received the answer that they could always come back tomorrow and that the wristband still served as an admission ticket.
They then said that they were not from the area and that it was not a matter of just coming up and down. For us, Tongeren is also a good hour and 15 minute drive, so it is not a trip to quickly repeat.
I personally looked for a bookmark in the museum shop, but only saw one with a mammoth on it and without a direct reference to the museum (I did not take it out of the box).
To end on a positive note: Jan Schepens looked good as Ambiorix and it was a clean museum.
เขียนเมื่อ 19 พฤษภาคม ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
Steffi
เบลเยียม10 ผลงาน
พ.ค. ค.ศ. 2024 • ครอบครัว
Pleasantly surprised by the search, audio and interactive screens for children. We had difficulty getting our 4-year-old son outside after 2 hours! Also interesting and clear for us. Visited Saturday afternoon, nice and quiet.
เขียนเมื่อ 18 พฤษภาคม ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
ChrisenGiselaV
Valkenswaard, เนเธอร์แลนด์324 ผลงาน
เม.ย. ค.ศ. 2024 • คู่รัก
We were pleasantly surprised by the real, so to speak, counterfeit examples of horses and people of that time. We were also able to experience the temporary exhibition of white marble statues converted into color. It is well worth visiting these exhibitions to gain more insight into that time.
เขียนเมื่อ 28 เมษายน ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
Marianne F
ฮาร์เลม, เนเธอร์แลนด์33 ผลงาน
เม.ย. ค.ศ. 2024 • คู่รัก
Fascinating and informative. There are a lot of schools around, which creates quite a bit of noise, but they all listened very attentively, so the book was also popular with young people.
There is a lot to read and lots of pottery!
There is a lot to read and lots of pottery!
เขียนเมื่อ 17 เมษายน ค.ศ. 2024
รีวิวนี้เป็นความเห็นหรือทัศนะของสมาชิก Tripadvisor และไม่ใช่ของ Tripadvisor LLC Tripadvisor ทำการตรวจสอบรีวิว
Hi,
I will be in Maastritct next month and would like to visit the museum with my two sons, ages 12 and 13. I will not have a car and do not want to rent one. Is there a way to get to Tongeren on public transportation from Maastritch?
เขียนเมื่อ 30 พฤษภาคม 2015
แสดงผลลัพธ์ 1-1 จาก 1
นี่คือข้อมูลสถานที่ให้บริการของคุณบน Tripadvisor ใช่ไหม
คุณเป็นเจ้าของหรือผู้บริหารสถานที่ให้บริการแห่งนี้ใช่ไหม อ้างสิทธิ์รายชื่อธุรกิจของคุณเพื่อตอบรีวิว อัปเดตโปรไฟล์ และอื่นๆ อีกมากมายได้ฟรี
อ้างสิทธิ์ในข้อมูลสถานที่ให้บริการของคุณ