EN RO















#Exhibit of the Month

>>>

The main parts of the camera include the body, bellows, lens, and viewfinder system. The body consists of two lacquered walnut wood frames, joined by a folding black textile bellows that allows the necessary extension for focusing. On the front panel is the Agfa anastigmat lens, mounted in a Compur-type shutter produced by F. Deckel in Munich. It features a foldable "brilliant" viewfinder for both portrait and landscape orientation. It uses glass photographic plates coated with a photographic emulsion, mounted in walnut wood holders, with a frame size of 9x12 cm.
The walnut wood model, considered the flagship "Agfa Isolar Luxus," was designed by the A.H. Rietzschel factory in Munich, acquired by AGFA in 1925, which continued producing this type of camera under its own name until the late 1920s.
The piece was restored by Mihail Culașco, Restoration Department of NMHM.
Brief History of the Camera
The history of the camera spans 200 years, evolving from the camera obscura to today's digital devices. Key milestones include: the first permanent photograph in 1826 by French physicist Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, using a wooden box and a plate coated with bitumen of Judea; the invention of the first photographic process - daguerreotype - in 1839 by Frenchman Louis Daguerre, marking the official birth of photography; the invention of calotype, based on the negative/positive principle, by British physicist and chemist Fox Talbot; the invention of wet collodion plates by Englishman Frederick Scott Archer and dry glass plates by Richard Leach Maddox and John Huds Bennet; the introduction of flexible roll film and the launch of the first Kodak camera by American inventor George Eastman; the release of the first 35 mm film camera by German company "Leica"; the launch of the first instant camera "Polaroid," invented by American Edwin Land. Finally, starting in 1975, this path led to the digital photography revolution. Each successive step made cameras smaller and faster, significantly improving image quality.
The first photographic studio in Chișinău was opened in 1854 by Eduard Glewski, and before World War I, there were already about 100 photography studios in Bessarabia.
The collection of the National Museum of History of Moldova includes over 30 cameras, made in Austria, Germany, France, USSR, Japan, and China, dating from the late 19th century to the 2000s. Among them are folding bellows cameras, BOX-type cameras, single-lens reflex (SLR) and twin-lens reflex (TLR) cameras, as well as digital (DSLR) cameras.

Virtual Tour


Events Archive

Memorial Peloton 2025 – international commemorative action in Chisinau (2nd edition)

August 30, 2025

On August 30, 2025, in the context of events commemorating the victims of all totalitarian and authoritarian regimes, the international pedestrian tour "Memorial Peloton 2025" took place in Chisinau.

The commemorative action was initiated by the Sybir Memorial Museum in Białystok (Poland) in 2017, and after 2022 it expanded to other European countries marked by the dramatic events that took place after the signing of the secret protocol of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact on August 23, 1939.

Being in its second edition in the Republic of Moldova, the commemorative action took place with the participation of guests from the Sybir Memorial Museum in Białystok (Poland) and the Genocide and Resistance Research Center in Vilnius (Lithuania), along with about 30 young people from both banks of the Dniester.

In his welcoming speech, Prof. Wojciech Śleszyński, Director of the Sybir Memorial Museum in Białystok, referred to the need to speak about the totalitarian phenomenon with a common voice, especially in the context of the war of aggression against Ukraine: "The history and memory of the victims of the repressions of the communist totalitarian regime, in the region marked by the dramatic consequences of the Stalin-Hitler Pact, is part of our common past, which we must remember and pass on to the younger generation."

The Attaché of the Embassy of the Republic of Lithuania in Chisinau, Mr. Liudas Gintautas Dabkus, referred to the importance of young people's participation in such interactive events of learning about history: "This is already the second Peloton of Memory in the Republic of Moldova and I am very happy to see so many young faces here, at this interactive event, which I believe will be interesting and, at the same time, very informative for all of us."

The Director of the Memorial Department of the Genocide and Resistance Research Center of Lithuania, Dr. Linas Jašinauskas, referred to the importance of international cooperation in organizing this commemorative action, reiterating the openness and support of Lithuanian colleagues in building a culture of memory in the Republic of Moldova.


The walking tour started in front of the Roman She-Wolf statue in front of the National Museum of History of Moldova, with a subsequent visit to the places of memory in the historical center of Chisinau: the memorial stone dedicated to the victims of the mass executions of the NKVD in 1940-1941 on the territory of the former Italian Consulate in Chisinau; the Church dedicated to the Transfiguration, transformed into a Planetarium and the Center for Atheism between the years of 1962-1990; the former Military Lyceum in Chisinau, destroyed and rebuilt as the headquarters of the KGB; the commemorative stone in the Great National Assembly Square.

It is worth mentioning that on the eve of the start of the Republic of Moldova edition of the 2025 Peloton of Memory, the exhibition "Sybir - the prison of the nations" was inaugurated at the National Museum of History of Moldova, developed by the Sybir Memorial Museum in Białystok (Poland), in cooperation with the National Museum of History of Moldova and the Embassy of the Republic of Poland in Chisinau.

The 2025 edition of the Peloton of Memory was held in four cities in Central and Eastern Europe: Riga (Latvia) - August 21; Vilnius (Lithuania) - August 22; Białystok (Poland) - August 24; Chisinau (RM) - August 30.

Organizers and partners:

- National Museum of History of Moldova
- Embassy of the Republic of Lithuania in the Republic of Moldova
- Hanns Seidel Foundation - Republic of Moldova
- Sybir Memorial Museum in Białystok (Poland)
- Genocide and Resistance Research Center (Lithuania)
- Latvian Occupation Museum (Latvia)- Institute of History of the Moldova State University
- Public Association Pro Memoria Institute
- Association of Former Deportees and Political Prisoners of Moldova



 

 


Independent Moldova
Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic
Bessarabia and MASSR between the Two World Wars
Bessarabia and Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in the Period between the Two World Wars
Revival of National Movement
Time of Reforms and their Consequences
Abolition of Autonomy. Bessarabia – a New Tsarist Colony
Period of Relative Autonomy of Bessarabia within the Russian Empire
Phanariot Regime
Golden Age of the Romanian Culture
Struggle for Maintaining of Independence of Moldova
Formation of Independent Medieval State of Moldova
Era of the
Great Nomad Migrations
Early Middle Ages
Iron Age and Antiquity
Bronze Age
Aeneolithic Age
Neolithic Age
Palaeolithic Age
  
  

Come to Museum! Discover the History!
  
Visit museum
Visit museum
Summer schedule: daily
10am – 6pm.

Winter schedule: daily
10am – 5pm.
Closed on Mondays.
Entrance fees:  adults - 50 MDL, Pensioners, students - 20 lei, pupils - 10 MDL. Free access: enlisted men (...)

WiFi Free Wi-Fi Zone in the museum: In the courtyard of the National History Museum of Moldova there is Wi-Fi Internet access for visitors.


#Exhibit of the Month

The main parts of the camera include the body, bellows, lens, and viewfinder system. The body consists of two lacquered walnut wood frames, joined by a folding black textile bellows that allows the necessary extension for focusing...

Read More >>

































The National Museum of History of Moldova takes place among the most significant museum institutions of the Republic of Moldova, in terms of both its collection and scientific reputation.
©2006-2026 National Museum of History of Moldova
Visit museum 31 August 1989 St., 121 A, MD 2012, Chisinau, Republic of Moldova
Phones:
Secretariat: +373 (22) 24-43-25
Department of Public Relations and Museum Education: +373 (22) 24-04-26
Fax: +373 (22) 24-43-69
E-mail: office@nationalmuseum.md
Technical Support: info@nationalmuseum.md
Web site administration and maintenance: Andrei EMILCIUC

 



The National Museum of History of Moldova takes place among the most significant museum institutions of the Republic of Moldova, in terms of both its collection and scientific reputation.
©2006-2026 National Museum of History of Moldova
Visit museum 31 August 1989 St., 121 A, MD 2012, Chisinau, Republic of Moldova
Phones:
Secretariat: +373 (22) 24-43-25
Department of Public Relations and Museum Education: +373 (22) 24-04-26
Fax: +373 (22) 24-43-69
E-mail: office@nationalmuseum.md
Technical Support: info@nationalmuseum.md
Web site administration and maintenance: Andrei EMILCIUC

menu
The National Museum of History of Moldova takes place among the most significant museum institutions of the Republic of Moldova, in terms of both its collection and scientific reputation.
©2006-2026 National Museum of History of Moldova
Visit museum 31 August 1989 St., 121 A, MD 2012, Chisinau, Republic of Moldova
Phones:
Secretariat: +373 (22) 24-43-25
Department of Public Relations and Museum Education: +373 (22) 24-04-26
Fax: +373 (22) 24-43-69
E-mail: office@nationalmuseum.md
Technical Support: info@nationalmuseum.md
Web site administration and maintenance: Andrei EMILCIUC