All ethnology museums to visit in Stockholm

Explore the cultural diversity and heritage at 5 ethnology museums in Stockholm. These museums offer insights into the traditions, customs, and ways of life of various communities.

Are you interested in learning about different cultures and their histories? Here are the ethnology museums to visit in Stockholm:

  1. The Swedish History Museum1

    The Swedish History Museum

     Stockholm
    The Swedish History Museum (Statens historiska museum) is the State Historical Museum in the Swedish capital Stockholm. The site dates back to 1866, and the construction of the current site took place between 1934 and 1939. It is the national Swedish museum of archeology and history with more than 2
  2. Nordic Museum2

    Nordic Museum

     Stockholm
    The Nordic Museum in Stockholm looks like a cathedral, but is in fact a museum with a vast collection of furniture, art and other artefacts connected with the cultural history of Sweden from the early modern period (which began in 1520) to the contemporary period. The museum is located on Djurgården
  3. The Jewish Museum in Stockholm3

    The Jewish Museum in Stockholm

     Stockholm
    The Jewish Museum is situated in Sweden’s oldest preserved synagogue. The building, located in Själagårdsgatan 19 in the Old Town, tells the story of the first Jews who came to Sweden, how they formed a community, and how they became a part of Swedish society. Stockholm’s earliest Jewish congregatio
  4. Forum För Levande Historia4

    Forum För Levande Historia

     Stockholm
    The Forum För Levande Historia is a state administrative institution in Sweden. The institution's mission is to promote democracy, human rights and tolerance. The Forum hosts exhibitions, debates and seminars, organizes traveling exhibitions and annually awards the Per Anger Prize to commemorate Per
  5. Museum of Ethnography5

    Museum of Ethnography

     Stockholm
    The Museum of Ethnography Stockholm (Etnografiska Museet) is a museum in Stockholm that holds and exhibits objects from China, Japan, Korea, South and Southeast Asia, Oceania, Africa, North and South America. The ethnographic collection contains about 220,000 objects. Most of the objects stem from 1