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#Exhibit of the Month

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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


Publications Journal „Tyragetia"


Tyragetia, serie nouă, vol. XIX [XXXIV], nr. 2, Istorie. Muzeologie
ISSN 1857-0240
E-ISSN 2537-6330

Tyragetia, serie nouă, vol. XIX [XXXIV], nr. 2, Istorie. Muzeologie

Chişinău, 2025

Researches


Șarolta Solcan
Residents of Moldavia in Wallachia in the 17th century and in the first half of the 18th century

Diana Eţco
Schools of the ethnic communities in Bessarabia in the context of social-political events of the early 20th century (1905-1917)

Papers and surveys


Nicolae Fuştei
Stephen the Great and Daniil the Hermit

Radu Cârciumaru
Notes on the origins of the Catargiu boyar family and its church in Târgovişte

Alina Felea
The institution of witnesses in wills in the Principality of Moldavia (the 17th century - beginning of the 19th century

Mariana Ursachi
“Fires” in Iaşi in 1844 and their consequences

Timotei Oprea-Stoian
Monastic Psychiatric Exile and the Early Institutionalization of the Insane in 19th century Wallachia

Игорь Сапожников
Manuscript found in St. Petersburg: I. Botyanov’s 1850 paper and the prehistory of Nikolaev

Eugen-Tudor Sclifos
The Bolgrad issue in the reports of the British ambassador to St. Petersburg, John Wodehouse

Andrei Emilciuc
Fishing tax-farming in state owned waters of Bessarabia (1812-1869)

Valentin Tomuleţ
Land disputes in Bessarabia in the 19th century – an important source in studying local history (The case of Major Ivan Sumarokov and Captain Ioan Costache regarding the half of the Mlenăuţi / Tabani estate in Khotin County)

Olga Andranovici
The Water Towers of the Costiujeni Clinical Psychiatric Hospital – a valuable industrial heritage

Alla Chastina
The town Orhei and its owners, tenants and donors in the XIX-XX centuries in the documents of the National Archival Agency of Moldova

Ruslan Grecu
An unknown document from 1901 related to the Račula monastic community

Anatolie Povestca
Religious buildings created by the architect Alexei Shchusev

Aurel Fondos
Religiousness in daily life in Bessarabia (1930s)

Eusebiu Narai
The Sudeten crisis (March-September 1938) as reflected in the pages of the daily newspaper The West (Timişoara). Case study: March-June 1938

Božica Slavković Mirić
Religious circumstances in Kosovo and Metohija between the two world wars

Mariana Șlapac
The vanished interwar memorial complex

Amalia Daniela Nicoară
Ada Kaleh, a community lost in the name of progress

Denisa Florentina Budeancă
Deportation of ethnic Germans from Romania to the USSR (January 1945)

Igor Cereteu
Priest Gheorghe Armaşu: victim of the repression of the totalitarian communist system

Olga Terzi
Some aspects of the organization of Operation “South” in the Moldavian SSR in 1949: the example of Bulgarians and Gagauz

Elena Chiaburu
Political purges from Romanian universities during the communist regime: the case of Gheorghe Ivănescu

Vitalie Guţu
Broadcasting in the Moldavian SSR: constitutive landmarks

Ana Maria Rusnac
Domnica Darienco: a life dedicated to the theatrical arts in the Republic of Moldova – over 50 years on stage

Anna Skowronek
The Gaydamowicz family in Bessarabia

Ginel Lazăr
Ștefan cel Mare (Stephen the Great), a national symbol honored by the National History Museum of Romania through national and international thematic exhibitions and publications (2004-2024)

Elena Ploşniţa
Memorial museum and public interest

Monica Cîrstea
The museum, a source of knowledge and good cheer

Adelaida Chiroşca
Images of St. Nicholas from museum collections: Hagiographic aspects

Vera Serjant
German porcelain from the collections of the National Museum of History of Moldova: identification, typology, development

Veronica Cosovan
Books in Old Slavonic from the library of the Bessarabian Church Historical and Archaeological Society Museum

Lilia Zabolotnaia
Rare editions of works by Dimitrie and Antiochus Cantemir, stored in the collections of the National Museum of History of Moldova

Elena Cojocari (Serbaniuc)
Ensuring access for persons with disabilities to museum heritage: Legislative aspects and functional framework in the Republic of Moldova

Silviu Andrieş-Tabac
Territorial symbols registered in the General Armorial of the Republic of Moldova in 2024

Paper and book review


Ludmila D. Cojocaru
Valeriu Antonovici, Claudia-Florentina Dobre (editori), Deportaţi în Bărăgan. Amintiri din Siberia românească. Târgovişte: Ed. Cetatea de Scaun, 2024, 272 p. ISBN: 978-606-537-682-3

Valentina Ursu
Adrian Dolghi (editor), Viaţa cotidiană în RSS Moldovenească (1944-1961). Studii şi documente. Chişinău: CEP UPSC, 2024, 375 p., ISBN 978-9975-46-955-5

 



 

 

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
  
  

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#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...

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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

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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