antiquities." The museum, operated by the City of Hanover, opened on as Homeland Museum of the City of Hanover () in the The founding took place on the initiative of the before being renamed to
Lower Saxon Folklore Museum () in 1937. Destroyed in 1943 during the
aerial bombings of World War II, provisional reconstruction began in 1950, at which time it adopted the temporary name of
Lower Saxon Homeland Museum (). In 1966 the museum opened with its present name in a new building designed by the architect
Dieter Oesterlen. The Association of the Friends of the Historical Museum () supports the work of the museum both materially and non-materially. In 2017, the museum's permanent exhibition, conceived in 1993, was redesigned. In 2020, at the start of the
lockdowns combating the global
COVID-19 pandemic, the museum closed for renovations that were initially projected to take three years. , renovation plans that seek a reopening sometime between 2028 and 2030 are projected to be presented for approval in 2024 and commencement of renovation works at the start of 2025. Until it reopens the museum intends to exhibit externally, rebranding itself as an
outside museum () and
history in motion (). == Location ==