The Maritime Museum is a very new venue, introducing a lot of historical knowledge about the development and transportation of the sea in Cannes, and the museum is located near the coastline and can see a lot of scenery and lights.
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Museum of the Sea Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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The Maritime Museum is a very new venue, introducing a lot of historical knowledge about the development and transportation of the sea in Cannes, and the museum is located near the coastline and can see a lot of scenery and lights.
The Maritime Museum is clever, basically because of its connection to the Iron Man. Most of the museum displays are marine discoveries from the island, which is great for an amateur archaeologist. There are also some murals in the prison cell.
Originally this was a prison, now it has become a museum, but there are not many things on display. The tourists here basically surrounded the small fighting room of the party that held the famous iron face people. After a few years, The Iron Man was eventually transferred to Bastille until death. The small fighting room was naturally inconspicuous, and would have almost ignored the past if it hadn't been for a sign hanging at the door. Other rooms also had murals depicting the story of the Iron Man.
The 17th-century royal castle/fortress (Le Fort Royal) on the cliff is now the Maritime Museum, with the cells of the Iron Man imprisoned on one side and the archaeological caves on the other showing ancient Roman relics excavated here, which are all life portraits of residents thousands of years ago. Includes wine, olive oil tiles, mosaics on the walls and some glazed tiles, wine glasses.
The Maritime Museum is located in a 17th-century fortress on St. Margaret's Island and is the oldest part of the island. This is the former French king Louis XIV period of the state prison, where the legendary Louis XIV twin brother was imprisoned, the film "Iron Man" is describing the story.
There are many exquisite classical buildings in Monaco, one of which stands on the edge of the cliff on the southern coast, very magnificent, and unknowingly people will definitely think that this is the palace or the town hall, in fact, it is the Maritime Museum of Monaco. Construction began in 1910 and took 11 years to complete, with the entire building made of marble and weighing 100,000 tons. It has the world's most diverse fishing boat model, marine specimens, superb marine scientific research equipment and laboratories, with great scientific value. The ocean museum is next to the cliff and the vast Mediterranean can be seen from the museum. The seabirds along the cliffs also join us in enjoying the charming sea.
The Mediterranean Maritime Museum is built on the Royal Fortress. The collection of cultural relics details the maritime history of France in various periods. It is located on Saint-Margaret Island, southeast of Cannes. The fortress was built in the 17th century. The French king Louis XIV built the national prison here. The most legendary story about the royal fortress is that of the mysterious prisoner Iron Man who once imprisoned Louis XIV. Dumas's novel about the mysterious figure was later adapted into a film. But the true identity of the Iron Man has been hidden in the fog of history and has not been unraveled. Open from April to mid-June Wednesday to Monday 10:30-13:15, 14:15-17:45, January-March, October to December Wednesday to Monday 10:30-13:15&14:15-16:45; mid-June to mid-September 10:30-17:45. Tickets are 3 euros for adults, 2 euros for students, and free tickets for under 18 years old. 20 minutes by scheduled ferry from Cannes port to the island.