What would become the Vladimir K. Arseniev Museum of History of the Far East was the first local history museum in the
Russian Far East. It is the largest museum in the
Primorsky Krai. The museum focuses on the history and natural history of the Primorsky Krai with the collections of materials and documents from the researchers of the region including
Mikhail Ivanovich Venyukov and
Nikolay Przhevalsky. It also features materials on the history of the Vladivostok area including its archeology and ethnography. The museum has branches in Vladivostok and throughout Primorsky Krai. The museum was established on 18 April 1884 when the charter of the was approved and after which construction of the museum building was started. It opened to the public on 12 October 1890. By the decree of the
Council of People's Commissars of 17 February 1925, the museum was seized by the Soviet state. On 4 September 1945, the museum was named after
Vladimir Arseniev, a Russian explorer of the Far East who wrote
Dersu Uzala about his expeditions with the eponymous
Nanai hunter. The Primorsky Regional Museum of Local Lore was reorganized into the Vladimir Arseniev Primorsky Krai United Museum on 25 November 1985. On 23 December 2019, the Primorsky Museum received federal status and was renamed the Vladimir K. Arseniev Museum of the Far East following its merger with the museum at
Vladivostok Fortress. As of 2015, the museum was the most visited regional museum in Russia with attendance exceeding 421,000 visitors.
Building history The Vladimir K. Arseniev Museum of History of the Far East is located in the building of a tenement house originally owned by Babintsev, one of the partners of the largest commercial and industrial companies in the Far East: "Trading House Churin and Kasyanov". The trading house was built between 1903 and 1906 by architect Vladimir Antonovich Plansen. The building temporarily housed the from 1914 to 1916. After the
Russian Revolution, the building was home to the
Yokohama Specie Bank, a hairdresser, a barbecue, a financial department, and the Pacific Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography. In 1977, the Primorsky Regional Museum moved into the building. ==Exhibits==