In the 16th century, the site of the Musée d'Aquitaine housed the convent of the
Feuillants. Destroyed during the
Revolution, it became a high school which burned down in 1871, then a university. In 1960, the
Lapidary Museum (created in 1783 by the Academy of Bordeaux) changed its primary vocation and brought together the collections of other museums (Prehistoric and Ethnographic Museum, Museum of Arms and Ancient Objects). It took the name of Museum of Aquitaine in 1962. Initially, the museum shared the premises of the
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux, in a building designed by Charles Burguet. In 1980, the Archaeological Society of Bordeaux signed an agreement with the city of Bordeaux to deposit the majority of its collections at the Museum of Aquitaine. Within the framework of this agreement, the museum's mission is to make these collections known without alienating their property. Then, on January 9, 1987, the museum moved into the premises of the former
Faculty of Letters and Sciences, a building built in the 1880s by the municipal architect Charles Durand and located in place of the former convents of the Feuillants and the Visitation. At the start of the 21st century, the Musée d'Aquitaine had 111,919 visitors in 2003, 88,738 in 2004, 99,880 in 2005, 101,897 in 2006, and 93,661 in 2007. == Location ==