The renovated stable of Maarjamäe palace is an exhibition and educational environment of the Estonian History Museum. Here, the museum's conservation experts have their contemporary working rooms; you can observe them at work through glass walls.
Good to know: this became a summer palace at the end of the 17 century. In 1811, it was bought by merchant Johann Gottlieb Clementz, who built a sugar factory and its ancillary buildings. The present Neogothic palace was constructed by Adjudant General Anatoli Orlov-Davydov in 1874.
Estonian Children's Literature Centre is located in a fairytalelike house in the old town of Tallinn. It is a home for children's books.
In the house there are a gallery of Edgar Valter, a library, illustration galleries, a treasure c...
The Kadriorg Art Museum introduces, preserves and collects early foreign art – primarily western European and Russian paintings, graphic arts, sculpture and applied arts. The museum is located in Kadriorg Park in Tallinn, in a Baroque palace built by Ts...