HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY
E-JOURNAL • 2024 SUMMER
www.hungarianarchaeology.hu
THE 130-YEAR-OLD AQUINCUM MUSEUM—A MUSEUM OF RENEWAL
Remarks on the festive exhibition
PAULA ZSIDI1 – ORSOLYA LÁNG2
Hungarian Archaeology Vol. 13. (2024) Issue 2, pp. 60–65.
Aquincum 130—The very best! A selection of the finest finds from the past 130 years of excavation in Aquincum—temporary exhibition in the Aquincum Museum (14 June–31 October 2024).
The Aquincum Museum of the Budapest History Museum celebrates the 130th anniversary of its foundation in 2024. On this occasion, the team of the museum has created a temporary and complementary exhibition displaying the most spectacular, beautiful, and interesting Roman finds from the almost one-and-a-half
century of excavation in Aquincum in the so-called ’old museum building’ and the protective building of
the mosaic floor with the Dirke scene. The items are arranged in the showcases in the order of their times
of discovery; the selection includes gold coins, stone carvings, a mummy portrait, the remains of an ornate
Roman wagon burial, and, in a separate part, some mosaics of the one-time Roman town, all presented in
the context of the history of Budapest. In her opening speech, Paula Zsidi, the retired director of the Aquincum Museum, gave a brief overview of the history of the Aquincum Museum and Archaeological Park; this
summary is also presented in this paper.
Keywords: Aquincum exhibition, 130, archaeology, museum, archaeological finds, opening event, mosaic
The Aquincum Museum of the Budapest History
Museum opened its doors for visitors first 130 years
ago on 10 May 1894 (Fig. 1). The road that had led
to that event was long: the exploration of the ruins
of the Roman settlement at Aquincum had begun
already in the last decades of the 18th century. It
took a multitude of exciting and spectacular archaeological excavations (e.g., of the amphitheatre of
the civil town or the large public bath, some residential buildings, and the Mithras sanctuary in the
area of the ruin garden), the discovery of extraordinary and beautiful Roman artefacts, the joint action
of renowned researchers of the era (Károly Torma,
József Hampel, and Bálint Kuzsinszky), and visits
from a few celebrated guests (like Crown Prince
Rudolph) for the name of Aquincum to become part
of the public discourse, as a result of which the site
was started to be developed into a ruin garden.
We wanted to celebrate the upcoming anniversary with a meaningful exhibition; however, in light
of the history of the place, the task seemed tremendous and full of responsibilities. How do we present
the history of the museum in a way that gives justice to the work of our predecessors, gives a com1
2
Archaeologist; e-mail: zsidi.paula@gmail.com
BHM Aquincum Museum; e-mail: lang.orsolya@aquincum.hu
Fig. 1. Attendees of the opening ceremony of the Aquincum
Museum on 10 May 1894 (source: BHM Aquincum Museum)
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Paula Zsidi – Orsolya Láng • The 130-year-old Aquincum Museum—A museum of renewal. Remarks on the festive exhibition
prehensive overview of the archaeological sensations of the past hundred and thirty years, and tells
the visitors the history of the settlement complex of
Aquincum? (Fig. 2). The curator team (Tibor Budai
Balogh, Anita Kirchhof, Orsolya Láng, and Péter
Vámos) has finally decided upon a concept where
the backbone of the exhibition is a selection of finds
from the past decades; it comprised artefacts which
became important because of their beauty, uniqueness, or scientific value. Archaeological exhibitions
commonly have a chronological or thematic structure. In this case, the curators opted for a chronoFig. 2. The old museum building today
logical arrangement; however, it was based not on
(photo by Péter Komjáthy)
the dating of the selected finds (e.g., to the Early,
Middle, or Late Roman Imperial Period) but the
time of their discovery, outlining the history of the excavations (and the museum) from the last decades
of the 19th century until 2023. The exhibited selection of iconic or recent discoveries includes the statue
of Mithras depicted as being born from a rock from the so-called Victorinus Mithraeum in the civil town,
some moulds for terra sigillata bowls from the eastern pottery workshop district of the civil town, the coin
hoard from Selmeci Street, the famous mummy portrait from Aquincum, mosaic floor and wall painting
remains from the villa at today’s Búvár and Folyamőr Streets, curse tablets from the cemeteries of
Aquincum, a wagon burial unearthed a few years
ago at Csillaghegy, and the painted altar stone of
the Mithraeum discovered at the northern limits of
the military town (Figs. 3–6). Instead of ‘regular’
descriptions, the spectacular and beautiful artefacts
were put on display together with longer descriptions. The timeline their discoveries outlined was
set against some milestones in the evolution of the
Hungarian capital, including, amongst others, the
opening of the Eastern Railway station in 1994, the
Queen concert in the Népstadion in 1986, and the
Fig. 3. Pottery moulds for making terra sigillata bowls from
the eastern workshop district of the civil town of Aquincum
(photo by Péter Komjáthy)
Fig. 4. Detail of a wall painting from an inn (today at 45
Pacsirtamező Street) in the military town of Aquincum
(photo by Péter Komjáthy)
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HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY E-JOURNAL • 2024 Summer
Paula Zsidi – Orsolya Láng • The 130-year-old Aquincum Museum—A museum of renewal. Remarks on the festive exhibition
Fig. 5. Elements of the so-called
‘Wagon of Csillaghegy’ in the exhibition
(photo by Péter Komjáthy)
Fig. 6. Painted altar stone with an inscription from the
Mithras sanctuary unearthed in the military town of
Aquincum (photo by Péter Komjáthy)
reconstruction of the historic building of the famous Corvin department store in 2023. This way, the exhibition reflects on the 150th anniversary of Budapest and helps the visitors—local residents as well as tourists—to connect the great eras of the excavations in Aquincum with the history of the capital city. The two
timelines on the lower part of the walls in the exhibition rooms are accompanied by a third with markings
for the dates of important excavations in Aquincum, as well as photos and short descriptions for those
artefacts from the Roman town which are currently on display in the permanent exhibition (like the water
organ, the bronze helmet of an infantryman, or the statue of Fortuna Nemesis; Figs. 7–8).
The ‘traditional’ parts of the exhibition in the northern and southern wings of the ‘old’ museum building
are completed by a section in the central room on the history of the museum (as this part of the museum was
Fig. 7. Interior of the exhibition ‘Aquincum 130—The very
best!’ (photo by Péter Komjáthy)
Fig. 8. Interior of the exhibition ‘Aquincum 130—The very
best!’ (photo by Péter Komjáthy)
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HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY E-JOURNAL • 2024 Summer
Paula Zsidi – Orsolya Láng • The 130-year-old Aquincum Museum—A museum of renewal. Remarks on the festive exhibition
Fig. 9. Entrance room of the exhibition ‘Aquincum 130—The
very best!’ and the exhibition on the museum’s history
(photo by Péter Komjáthy)
Fig. 10. Interior of the exhibition
Tiny stones, colourful flooring’
(photo by Péter Komjáthy)
the one opened in May 1894). The original late 19th-century wall paintings were partially reconstructed in
this room, where the written sources, images, and objects related to the earliest excavations and the foundation of the museum are on display: the room is full of paintings and historical photos, letters, the deed of
foundation of the museum, one of the museum’s publications from the early 20th century, documents damaged in the Second World War, and some finds from the first excavations (Fig. 9). Using the instruments
and solutions of museum education, interactive elements and toys complete the exhibition to make it more
attractive for the younger audience. Those interested in the history of the museum building housing the
exhibition are not left without information either: as a result of recent conservatory exploration, a detail of
the early 20th-century floor and a part of the original, colourful wall decorations resembling Roman wall
paintings have been exposed and could be presented.
The exhibition in the old museum building is completed with a small one in the neighbouring protective
building for the Dirké mosaic scene; it is entitled Tiny stones, colourful flooring and focuses on the mosaics
of Aquincum and the technology behind them. The small exhibition revolves around the central element of
the unique mosaic floor depicting the punishment of Dirké. This floor fragment was found exactly where
it is today; it was left and conservated in situ and covered with a protective building later. In the future,
other reconstructed elements will be added to the floor fragment (Fig. 10); thus, this exhibition remains in
the making and is intended to be a permanent one, which will only be completed when, after more than a
century, all recovered parts of the mosaic floor are fitted back to their original places.
Let us cite some of the opening speech held by Paula Zsidi, the retired director of the Aquincum Museum,
to motivate you to visit the two exhibitions offering insight into the history, successes, and challenges in the
first 130 years of the Aquincum Museum, while also marking the route to take for the current team:
The day is 10 May 1894, and Budapest, the Hungarian capital that had only united two decades ago, is
preparing for a major cultural event. The representatives of the Council of Budapest and the Ministry of
Religion and Public Education, the Magistrate of District 3, and the National Archaeological Society arrive
at the opening of the Aquincum Museum, the first independent museum complex of the Budapest Museum
founded after the Austro-Hungarian Compromise in 1867. The building, designed to resemble a Graeco-Roman podium temple, sits amidst freshly excavated ruins; in the south, the chimneys of the brick factory at the feet of the Kiscell Hills appear on the horizon; in the west, sight is stopped by the silhouette of the
Buda Mountains. From time to time, the wind brings the rattling of cars from the road to Szentendre and the
clattering of the newly built suburban train. In the north, the splashing of the Aranyhegyi stream, turning the
Krempel mill’s water wheels, mixes with the mooing of cows on the neighbouring farm. The crowd gathers
for a sensation in this idyllic and tranquil then-suburban landscape. In the words of Bálint Kuzsinszky, the
director freshly appointed by the board of Budapest, “The crowd that tends to pay an occasional visit to Old
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Paula Zsidi – Orsolya Láng • The 130-year-old Aquincum Museum—A museum of renewal. Remarks on the festive exhibition
Buda to check on the new discoveries made on the excavations carried out there will certainly be pleased
to see the new building rising above the sea of ruins around it, a building the form of which lets no doubt
about its function even when seen from afar. It is a praise of the diligence and good intent of the management of the capital that the finds recovered from these excavations have now a proper home” (Vasárnapi
Újság 27 May 1894, 354). Most attending the opening ceremony knew that the Aquincum Museum is the
first such complex north of the Alps where, besides the excavated Roman ruins, the finds recovered from
them are exhibited on the spot. This complex had opened before the similar ones of Carnuntum in Austria,
Vindonissa in Switzerland, and Saalburg, Haltern, and Xanten in Germany. The father of Hungarian archaeology, Flóris Rómer, the leaders of the excavations, Károly Torma and József Hampel from the Hungarian
National Museum, and later, the first director of the Aquincum Museum, Bálint Kuzsinszky took the lion’s
share in establishing the institution.
Upon entering the small building, designed by Gyula Orczy, the attendants of the opening ceremony
could gaze at its ornate interior resembling the wall decorations of Pompeii and wonder at the cream of the
about 3,000-piece collection of finds. According to coeval reports, “the opening ceremony was followed
by a dinner at Római-fürdő” (KuzsinszKy 1897, 10). The fame and success of the exhibition spread far, and
in the upcoming decades, the Aquincum Museum became a popular target for trips amongst local residents
and a prominent venue for cultural life in the capital. A few illuminating moments or ones of international
significance in this period are worth highlighting.
The first is the mosaic floor depicting the punishment of Dirké, first published in the 1920s. In a later
study, Lajos Nagy wrote about the image, “Its connection is the closest with the Farnese Bull, a complex
statue in the Thermae of Caracalla” (nagy 1943, 94), thus indicating that the provincial art of Aquincum
has a close connection with the classical art in Italy, and cannot be understood properly without assessing
it in light of that. The floor with the mythological scene could not be protected in situ at that time; so it was
removed, and only now, after a century, could be reconstructed and presented (even if, for the time being,
only in parts) at its original place.
Barely a decade later, the name Aquincum appeared in the news as the place of a sensational discovery.
Lajos Nagy, the second director after Bálint Kuzsinszky, recovered the remains of a water organ there in
1931. News of this unique find spread across the borders of the country, and even the Italian king, Vittorio
Emmanuele, came to Aquincum to see it. Lajos Nagy wrote in his report, “His Highness the Italian king
visited first the amphitheatre, then the exhibited finds in the museum and the lapidary” (Éder 2020, 188).
There were also darker periods in the 130-year-long history of the Aquincum Museum, which suffered
significant damage in World War Two and the following years. A bomb hit the museum building in September 1944. It was reopened in 1948 after a modest renovation; however, the condition of the ruins gradually
deteriorated over the years, and the institution started losing its prestige due to a decrease in available funds
and the poor condition of the ruins. In 1953, the scientific staff and the management were moved from the
main building and the institution was downgraded from museum to exhibition area.
It could recover from this hopeless situation thanks primarily to the perseverance, high-quality professional work, and great organising skills of Klára Póczy, who managed to win Gyula Hajnóczi, a professor
at the University of Technology, to the case of rehabilitating the ruin garden, as well as the support of the
management of Budapest. As a result, the rehabilitation started in the 1960s based on the plans by Ágnes
Vladár. The innovative take on the tasks related to the protection, rehabilitation, and preservation of the
ruins turned the attention of professionals in Hungary and abroad to Aquincum again. Although the rebuilding was not completed due to the construction of the residential estate in Óbuda and the related intensive
rescue excavation project, upon its abandoning, the museum was in a state that made it fit to be widely
utilised as a venue of cultural, educational, and touristic programmes.
Repairing its damaged prestige, however, took way more time and involved the fall of the Communist
regime. In 1989, the Aquincum Museum officially became a museum again, and in the following period,
it received back all parts (including a scientific staff) it had been deprived of after World War Two and,
with the new building with offices in storage rooms opened in 2000, even its collection. The following
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twenty-five years since have been a period of development supported by the Hungarian state, the capital,
and District 3 of Budapest. As a result, the Aqiuncum Museum is home today, besides the Ancient History
Department, to the Department of Prehistory and Migration Period. By today, it had also become a centre
of research on provincial Roman archaeology in Hungary, with a team including several internationally
renowned researchers with university degrees who also participate in university-level education. Its collection of provincial Roman finds is amongst the largest in the country, and its archaeological park is an
important point in the cultural and touristic assortment of the Hungarian capital. The success of the first
130 years gives confidence and strength to the ‘museum of renewal’ to face the upcoming developments,
projects, and challenges.
references
Éder, K. (2020). Különleges látogatók: III. Viktor Emánuel olasz király és Ilona királyné a Fővárosi
Múzeumban – 1937 májusában. Tanulmányok Budapest Múltjából 44, 185–198.
Kuzsinszky, B. (1897). Bevezető. Budapest Régiségei 5, 1–11.
Nagy, L. (1943). Dirke bűnhődése az aqincumi mozaikon. Budapest Régiségei 13, 77–102.