The Assembly Affairs Museum, The Legislative Yuan (traditional Chinese: 立法院議政博物館; simplified Chinese: 立法院议政博物馆; pinyin: Lìfǎyuàn Yìzhèng Bówùguǎn) is a museum in Wufeng District, Taichung, Taiwan.
立法院議政博物館 | |
Established | 2007 |
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Location | Wufeng, Taichung, Taiwan |
Coordinates | 24°03′16″N 120°41′45″E / 24.05444°N 120.69583°E |
Type | museum |
Website | Official website (in Chinese) |
History
editThe museum was established by Legislative Yuan Secretary-General Lin Hsi-shan to maintain and make public the historical data of the legislature and continued the archival work of Legislative Yuan.[1]
Exhibitions
edit- Section 1
- The collection, collation, analysis, research, archival and digitization of the documents and artifacts-related to the history of assembly development
- The collection and collation of the documents and artifacts-related to the history of local assembly development
- The collection and collation of local assembly publications
- Worldwide inter-museum cooperation and exchange
- Section 2
- The utilization and exhibition of the documents and artifacts-related to the history of assembly development
- The utilization and exhibition of the documents and artifacts-related to the history of local assembly development
- The utilization and exhibition of local assembly publications
- The exhibition of the files, historical documents and books and data that are historic in assembly development
- Exhibitions, contacts, services and guided tours of assembly data
Responsibilities
edit- Matters relating to the collection, organization, archiving and exhibition of assembly affairs-related historical materials
- Matters relating to the analysis, study and use of assembly affairs-related historical materials
- Matters relating to the digitization of assembly affairs-related historical materials and associated services
- Liaising on other assembly affairs information-related services[2]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "The Legislative Yuan Republic of China". Ly.gov.tw. Archived from the original on 2014-03-30. Retrieved 2014-04-21.
- ^ "Assembly Affairs Museum, Legislative Yuan". Museums. Ministry of Culture. Retrieved 18 August 2022.
External links
editWikimedia Commons has media related to Assembly Affairs Museum.
- Official website (in Chinese)