National Museum of Greenland

Museums Nuuk

Greenland National Museum in Nuuk has exhibitions that cover all of Greenland’s history during 4,500 years.

From the first Arctic Stone Age Cultures, the Norse settlements, the arrival of the Thule culture – the ancestors to the present Inuit to the gradual transition to modern Greenland.

Languages

We speak English, Greenlandic and Danish.

Operating Months

JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
MAY
JUN
JUL
AUG
SEP
OCT
NOV
DEC

Operating areas

Contact information

Hans Egedesvej 8
3900 Nuuk

Greenland

+299 32 26 11

Experiences offered at National Museum of Greenland

Permanent collections
The National Museum has a unique ethnographical collection. Explore our collection from Ammassalik and Avanersuaq from 1880-1920 in the exhibition Thule culture – New people.

Discover the famous mummies and costumes from Qilakitsoq in northwest Greenland, as well as the world’s oldest and almost complete intact skin boat – the Pearyland Umiaq, whose well-preserved remains are estimated to date back to 1470s.

In addition Greenland National Museum has a large collection of Inuit means of transportation including full-scale skin boats and dog sledges as well as a prominent art and photo collection.

Traditional clothes and small time warps provide an impression of the history and environments of the recent colonial period. Special exhibitions will represent Greenland cultural heritage.

Greenland National Museum is located in the characteristic colonial buildings at the old colonial harbour with a fantastic view over the fiord. The Landsmuseum was established in 1966. In 1991 the Landsmuseum and the Landsarchive – the first archive in the country – merged and was from then on acknowledged as Greenland’s National Museum & Archives (NKA).