Creepy and frightening museums from different parts of the world. Phallus Museum - Husavik, Iceland

There are over 55,000 museums in the world. Many people go to them under compulsion, believing that there is nothing worse and more boring than this occupation in the world. Nevertheless, the museums presented in this list are unlikely to seem boring to you. You will not find dinosaur skeletons, iconic sculptures, vintage cars, archaeological finds or famous paintings. But they are a great entertainment option for those who crave shock and perhaps even horror. People have always been attracted to strange and unexplored things, so there is nothing surprising in the fact that such peculiar museums exist at all.

So if the Louvre and National Gallery the arts no longer impress you, welcome to these ten of the most shocking, controversial and extreme museums in the world.

Abashiri Prison Museum (Hokkaido, Japan)

The Abashiri Prison Museum (Hokkaido, Japan), founded in 1985, displays buildings and structures that were once part of a functioning prison. Here visitors can learn about how the Japanese prison system functioned in the late 1800s. If you get hungry while exploring the courtroom or torture chamber, feel free to head to the real prison cafeteria and taste the dishes that were once given to Abasari prisoners: fried mackerel, miso soup, barley and rice.

Alcatraz Prison Museum (San Francisco, California)

Most famous museum on this list, Alcatraz attracts over 1 million visitors annually. There are a huge number of different exhibits here: tools that were used when trying to escape, art products, crafted by prisoners, and items from federal and military penitentiaries of yesteryear. Museum staff will tell you about the fugitives, historical facts and the occupation of Alcatraz 1969-1971. Audio tours are available in many languages.

Death Museum (Hollywood, California)

The Museum of Death, founded in 1995, was originally located in the morgue in San Diego (California, USA). It's now in Hollywood, a "proper" location for a museum that houses photographs from the murder case of Elizabeth Short ("The Black Dahlia"), as well as photographs from the crime scenes committed by Charles Mills Manson.

The Museum of Death has a huge collection of coffins, autopsy tools and tools for the death penalty. Impressionable and faint-hearted entry here is undesirable; there were cases when, when examining some exhibits, visitors fainted from horror.

Outlaws Hall of Fame Wax Museum (Niagara Falls, Ontario)

This creepy museum features realistic wax figures of notorious criminals with a horrific past. When the Outlaw Hall of Fame opened in 1977, there were only 18 wax figures in it. Its popularity grew, and now there are 40 exhibits. In the museum you can see the famous gangsters Al Capone and George Kelly Barnes in their "natural habitat", as well as the famous serial killers John Wayne Gacy and Jeffrey Dahmer. In addition, there are wax figures in the Outlaws Hall of Fame. fictional characters horror films such as Freddy Krueger, Michael Myers and Leatherface.

Black Museum (London, England)

The Black Museum at Scotland Yard presents a collection of exhibits reflecting criminal life the capitals of England, from late XIX centuries. However, it can only be seen on DVD as the museum is not open to the public. The items stored in it, the police used to study the activities and motives of criminals. Among the exhibits of the Black Museum you can find archives on the cases of Ruth Ellis, the last woman in the UK to be put to death, and Dennis Nielsen, a serial killer and necrophile.

Torture Museum (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)

This museum, located in Amsterdam near the Singel Canal, is entirely dedicated to the instruments of torture. Here are such shocking exhibits as "gallow cages", "masks of shame", "skull crushers", "heretic forks", "guillotines" and "gibbets".

Amsterdam also has another torture museum dedicated specifically to medieval instruments of torture, with their use on wax figures.

Phallological Museum (Reykjavik, Iceland)

Sigurdur Hjartarson, founder of the Phallological Museum, with early years interested in the sexual organs of animals. As a child, he was given a bull's penis, which he used as a cattle whip. In 1974, at the suggestion of a friend, he began to collect the sexual organs of mammals. Most of the penises featured in the Phallological are whales; the largest of them has a length of 170 cm. Of the 280 exhibits, the most strange, of course, is the penis of a 95-year-old man. The Icelander wanted to immortalize the sexual exploits of his youth, so after his death he decided to donate his penis to the museum.

House of Mr. Toilet (Suwon, South Korea)

The building of the House of Mr. Toilet was built in 2007. Here he lived out his last years Sim Jay Duck, founder of the World Toilet Association. After his death in 2009, the building was converted into a museum where you can learn about the history of toilets from around the world and the life of Sim Jay Duck.

Sirijai Medical Museum (Bangkok, Thailand)

The Sirijay Medical Museum is actually made up of several museums, the most shocking of which seems to be the Forensic Medicine Museum. Among all the exhibits found in the Sirijay hospital, the bodies of dead babies with various birth defects are especially striking. The museum also has eerie photographs of suicides and terrible tragedies, for example, pictures that show how little boy an airplane propeller cut off his head. The Forensic Science Museum also houses the mummified body of notorious Thai serial killer Si Ouei Sei Urng.

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These museums are not just frightening, they inspire inhuman horror. If you have nerves of steel and like to tickle them, then we advise you to visit these creepy places and see everything with your own eyes. In the meantime, we invite you to take a look at the photos of the most terrible museums from different countries peace. Not recommended for viewing by pregnant women, children, as well as persons with an unstable psyche!

Museum of Death in Los Angeles, California, USA

The creepy Museum of Death in Los Angeles houses the largest collection artwork that were created by serial killers. This collection can easily scare even the most skeptical people and penetrate their subconscious. The photographs of the actual gruesome scenes of the murders and the autopsies that followed them are clearly not meant for people with weak stomachs. Photos of horrific car accidents can discourage a person from ever getting into a car again. The museum has rooms filled with funeral paraphernalia and embalming tools, photographs of executions, exhibits that graphically reflect various occasions murders, as well as a room dedicated exclusively to cases of suicide. Still not afraid to visit this museum? Then try to watch the videos that are on public display, in which people are actually killed. In this museum, you can also see the head of the Parisian assassin "Bluebeard" (Henri Landru), severed by a guillotine.

Ventrology Ventrology Museum Vent Haven Ventriloquist Museum, Fort Mitchell, Kentucky, USA


Ventriloquists puppets can seem outdated and sentimental. They take us back to the days of vaudeville and carnivals, but take a closer look - they look extremely intimidating. The fact that they seem alive and have a distinct personality is a trick well done, of course, but there is also something creepy about these mini-humans. They tell jokes, roll their eyes, and sometimes even speak their mind. own opinion. If you put aside distrust and look closely, you can easily imagine that they are capable of rather gloomy and evil deeds.

If one such doll looks scary, then imagine the horror of their whole collection of more than 700 dolls sitting in chairs and looking at you with empty eyes. Ventrology Museum Vent Haven, located in Kentucky, is the only museum in the world dedicated to ventrology. Here you will find a huge variety of mannequins carved from wood, with well-crafted features so that they can be seen even from the back rows of the theater. Their ruthless eyes will follow you around the museum, as if trying to get you to take on the role of their master. Stay calm and try not to run out of the museum screaming in horror.

Museum of the Mummies, Guanajuato, Mexico


In the city of Guanajuato, Mexico, you can visit a terribly strange museum that will haunt you in nightmares. There are the bodies of 111 mummified men, women and children, many of which have their mouths open, forever frozen in screams of horror, as these people were buried alive. These bodies were originally buried during a cholera outbreak that occurred in the region in 1833. They were gradually dug up from their final resting place between 1865 and 1958 because their surviving relatives were unable or unwilling to pay taxes to be left in the ground. The Mummies Museum developed due to the fact that tourists paid the cemetery workers a few pesos to look at the preserved bodies that were in the cemetery building. While browsing this creepy collection, you will be able to see the smallest mummy in the world, the fetus of a pregnant woman who fell victim to the cholera plague. Other creepy mummies wear the same clothes they were buried in, while some of them lie naked or only in shoes and socks. The eeriness of seeing this peculiar collection of life after death may well creep into your worst nightmares.

Musée Dupuytren, Paris, France



This terrifyingly strange and creepy museum located in Paris is filled with real examples medical deviations. The Dupuytren Museum was opened in 1835 by the famous Parisian anatomist and surgeon, who collected diseased and mutilated fetuses, skeletons and human organs. This gruesome collection, which numbers some 6,000 pieces, consists of jars filled with liquid containing deformed human body parts, Siamese twins and babies born with internal organs out. The museum also features six wax models. human heads with bizarre cysts, cleft lips, and frighteningly undetectable birth defects. There are, of course, also many glass jars filled with the floating brains of aphasic patients, which are well preserved in alcohol. Shocking and disgusting at the same time, this museum is sure to impress even the most callous visitor.

Glore Psychiatric Museum, St. Joseph, Missouri, USA


Upon entering the strange Glore Psychiatric Museum, a sense of danger and caution is activated. The museum was opened in 1968 in psychiatric hospital, which was originally named State Lunatic Asylum #2 in 1874. Darkness permeates the corridors of this building. Perhaps these are the old cries of those people who were imprisoned in these very walls, and who were subjected to strange, often painful procedures aimed at bringing “madness” out of them. Imagine being imprisoned in a huge hamster wheel - that's exactly what the Hollow Wheel was, in which 18th-century patients moved for 48 hours as doctors tried to wear them down. Other patients were doomed to the "tranquilizer chair" where they were made incisions on parts of the body, which were left to bleed for up to six months under the supervision of a doctor who believed that mental disorders were caused by too much blood in the human brain. Among other "improving" procedures were also lowering patients into buckets of ice water to cause a shock in all their vital systems and normalize their psychological state.

All of the above and a huge number of other procedures can be seen by visiting this terrifying museum. There you can also see the barbaric psychiatric techniques, tools, equipment and 3D displays that recreate all this madness with the help of mannequins with smiling faces. At the museum, you can admire eerie works of art created by real patients and view an intricate set of items pulled from the stomach of one of the patients suffering from mental disorder: 453 nails, 105 hair bobby pins, 115 safety pins, plus a range of nails, screws, buttons, hooks, buttons and needles. Know that no matter how difficult life may seem to us at times, things could be much worse.

Mutter Museum of Medical History, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA


The Mütter Museum of Medical History is a collection of pathological specimens and medical anomalies. The museum first opened its doors to panicked and disgusted visitors in 1858. In this museum you can look at: the real brains of murderers and epileptics, a wall of skulls with stories about how each of these people died, a plaster cast of the infamous Siamese twins Chang and Eng, including the real, attached to a cast of the liver, which was common to the twins, as well as to the skeleton of a giant man, whose height reached 228 centimeters. This place can definitely give you goosebumps. Just like in the Dupuytren Museum in Paris, there are banks in which creatures swim that are supposedly people, but are more like aliens. Here you can also find photographs of the most unusual and disgusting diseases and deformities of the human body. Also, try to hold back the urge to vomit when you see the 274 cm long human colon, which at the time of the operation had accumulated more than 18 kilograms of feces. The owner of this colon was a second-rate actor who performed under the nickname Great balloon(Great Balloon). The Mütter Museum of Medical History should definitely be visited only by those people who do not have a weak stomach.

Museum of Criminal Anthropology named after Cesare Lombroso (Lombroso's Museum of Criminal Anthropology), Turin (Turin), Italy



Over 400 human skulls oversee Italian museum criminal anthropology, created in 1898 by the criminal physiognomist Cesare Lombroso. Lombroso was obsessed with the idea that deviant behavior and criminal tendencies went hand in hand with the shape and size of the human skull. He collected and dismembered the skulls of soldiers, civilians, criminals and lunatics.

His collection also includes full-sized skeletons, brains, autopsy images, antique tools and guns that have been used in actual crimes. The atmosphere of fear reigns in the halls of this museum. If you don't believe us, then you can ask Dr. Lombroso himself. His perfectly preserved head is exhibited here in a separate glass chamber.

Medieval Torture Museum, San Gimignano, Italy


Are you curious to know why the Middle Ages are also called the Dark Ages of European history? Are you ready to explore the sadistic side of humanity and see how cruel people can be who hide their actions under the guise of "justice" or punishment? Visit the Museum of Medieval Torture in San Gimignano, Italy and explore this collection of over 100 terrifying, painful devices of pure sadism.

This museum is located in the basement of the Devil's Tower of the 13th century. Being in the tower, you can almost hear the screams and groans of people enduring torture. Traveling through the corridors, you will see the once functioning guillotine, the devil's rack, used to stretch and tear people apart, the barbaric "Spanish Spider" (Spanish Spider), which was used to tear out the breasts of an unfaithful wife, as well as the "Heretic's Fork" made with razor-sharp spikes, which were installed under the victim's chin and did not allow her to fall asleep. In the museum, you can get a closer look at the truly terrifying "Iron Maiden" (Maiden of Nuremberg) - a coffin-like device with an opening door, studded with sharp blades from the inside, which pierced the victim in the device when the door was closed. This museum not only reflects true darkness dark ages but also explores the abyss of darkness of some human souls.


Not only about the attributes of the culture of burial - wreaths, coffins - but also about death itself is told in this museum with all the Hollywood special effects and without sparing visitors. Here you can see photos of bloody incidents, executions, portraits of serial killers, hear the "sounds of death". Among the real "deadly" exhibits are the embalmed head of the serial maniac Henri Landru, nicknamed Bluebeard, who killed women, and the bed of a member of the Heaven's Gate cult, on which human sacrifices were made. Separate room The museum is dedicated to suicide and suicides. Those whose nerves allow can see photos and even videos of autopsies in the morgue, embalming devices. The motto of the museum: "We all die."

Museum of Lies - Germany, Kuritz

Everything in this museum is "deceitful" - from the building itself, which pretends old mansion, before Stalin's mop on display.The German artist Reinhard Zabka, who calls himself a descendant of Baron Munchausen (of course, he's lying!) arranged 10 rooms packed with various items, under their exposure to lies. Here, not originals are valuable, but fakes. Among the fake exhibits are a radio from the sunken Titanic, Hitler's false mustache and much more - go, read and don't believe it. Visitors are urged not to believe their eyes and set up for a lie from the very entrance: they offer to taste a piece of plastic cake and drink it with a healing collection of herbs for all diseases.

Museum of the Human Body - Holland, Uchsthuis

The museum, which was opened in 2008, is located inside a giant 35-meter figure of a seated man. This figure and the building adjacent to it are located on the highway between Amsterdam and The Hague. A tour inside the human body takes a little less than an hour. During this time, visitors find themselves in all parts of the human body, starting with the legs, moving up and up the escalators. Muscles, bones, heart, kidneys, lungs, digestive organs, eyes, ears and brain are shown here in an enlarged size. Here they show what happens inside a person when he sneezes, when he sleeps, how hair grows, how the brain and human receptors work.

Hair Museum - Türkiye, Coppadocia

The hair of thousands of women was collected in his basement museum under a pottery shop by the Turkish potter Chez. It all started with one thing: leaving the city more than 30 years ago, Chez's beloved woman named Galipa left him her lock of hair as a keepsake. After that, women began to flock here and for some reason leave strands of their hair with notes with phone numbers and addresses. The Chez collection already has more than 16,000 samples of women's hair.

Snowflake Museum - Japan, Hokkaido

In the "snowy" region of Japan - on the island of Hokkaido - there is a snowflake museum organized by physicist Nakaya Ukichiro. It shows huge photographs of snowflakes of all shapes and types, talks about the waysnow crystals to the ground and about the uniqueness of each, about the ultrasound that every snowflake falling into the water emits. They will also tell you what affects the shape of a falling snowflake: for example, if it meets a stream of colder air, its crystal is drawn into a column, if it is warmer, plates are formed that always have a hexagonal shape.

Toilet Museum - India, Delhi

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Spicy exhibits - panties and bras of show business stars and politicians - and always used, collected in his museum Belgian artist Jacques Buqua. The most valuable exhibits for him - for example, the underpants of ex-president of France Nicolas Sarkozy - he draws up in collages. He is very proud of the presence in his collection of elegant shorts of the Minister of Finance of Belgium and the Belgian woman politician Fadila Lanaan.

It so happened that at the word museum, a person has an association with art galleries, exhibitions of works of art, classic painting and sculpture. But this is only a small part of the entire list of museums that may be of interest, not only with an unusual exposition, but with a very unexpected and sometimes even incredibly absurd.

A person is a curious creature, and he is always interested in seeing something extraordinary, original, unusual - something that cannot be found everywhere and not always seen. And if by some miracle you managed to visit almost all museums (which is not possible, since more and more new ones are opened in the world almost every day) or if you are bored with the “traditional” exhibits presented in them, then we advise you to pay attention to those dedicated to the most extraordinary things.

Moreover, there are also many of them, they are located in various parts of our planet. Well, for example, have you ever thought that somewhere in the world there is a museum in which the exhibits are dead cockroaches dressed up in various costumes or, for example, lawn mowers, or the souls of the dead. And they are, and including because everything usually causes a stir.

It is to such unusual, extraordinary museums that we invite our readers today.

Leila's Hair Museum - Independence, USA

Leila's hair museum has a large collection of various hair products. So, for example, the museum exhibits 500 wreaths of hair strands, and also, in the collection, there are more than 2,000 pieces of all kinds of jewelry that use human hair: earrings, brooches, pendants, and more. All exhibits date from the 19th century.

Phallus Museum - Husavik, Iceland

Another rather strange, to say the least, museum. It would seem, who would think of creating a museum dedicated to the penis? That person turned out to be a 65-year-old history teacher. The museum has more than 200 exhibits. Penises are in various glass vessels with formalin solution. Here are the organs of both the smallest sizes - hamsters (2 mm long) and the largest ones - the blue whale (part of the penis 170 cm long and weighing 70 kg). So far, there are no human genitals in the collection, however, one volunteer has already bequeathed his “dignity” to this unusual museum.

Museum of Death - Hollywood, USA

One of the most unusual museums in the world - the Museum of Death, began its work in 1995. The original museum was housed in a mortuary building in San Diego. Later, the museum reopened in Hollywood. The following exhibits are presented in the museum's collection: funeral paraphernalia - wreaths, coffins, etc.; photographs of serial killers, bloody road accidents, executions, crime scenes; photo and video of autopsy in the morgue of bodies; various tools for embalming and surgical operations. The museum also has a hall dedicated to suicide and suicide as a phenomenon in general. Among the exhibits there is even an embalmed head of a serial maniac and murderer of women - Henri Landru, nicknamed "Bluebeard".

Museum of the Souls of the Dead in Purgatory - Rome, Italy

This museum is located in the church of Del Sacro Cuore. The main theme of the museum exhibits is the proof of the existence of the soul and its presence on earth (ghosts). For example, in the collection there is such an artifact - a night headdress, on which a ghost's palm print remained. Also, many other items are exhibited here, on which there were traces of fingerprints, soles and other marks, which, according to the people who provided these artifacts, were left by ghosts.

Museum of the Human Body “Korpus” - Leidlen, The Netherlands

This original museum located near Leiden University. The building itself is a 35-meter human figure, where on each floor you can see how various human organs and systems look and function from the inside. The museum is very interactive, it imitates various sounds inherent in a particular organ, shows various processes occurring in the human body - reproduction, respiration, digestion, injuries of a particular organ. This is a very interesting and informative place, rightfully considered one of the most unusual museums in the world.

International Toilet Museum - Delhi, India

Very interesting and unusual museum dedicated to the well-known subject of hygiene - the toilet. All exhibits in this museum, one way or another, are connected with the toilet theme: urinals, toilet paper, toilet bowls, etc. The museum was first created by a scientist from India, who devoted his life to studying the problems of the disposal of human feces and their subsequent processing in order to generate electricity. In total, the museum has several thousand items, the oldest of which is about 3000 thousand years old. In fact, it is not surprising that such a museum is located in India, because. The sanitary and epidemiological problem is very acute in this country.

Dog Collar Museum - London, UK

This museum is located in Leeds Castle near London. The museum's exhibits span five centuries and include everything from strict collars designed to control hunting dogs to stylish and shiny accessories made in the 21st century, according to the top 10.

Museum of Bad Art - Boston, USA

The idea of ​​​​creating such an unusual museum, antiquarian Scot Wilson, was prompted by the painting “Lucy in a field with flowers” ​​he saw in a trash can, after which he decided that such “works of art” should be collected in a collection. Here are the works of artists who have not been evaluated by any other museum in the world, and by the way, it is not clear by what criteria they can be evaluated. The exposition of the museum has about 500 items. Since this kind of museum is the only one in the world, it deserves the title of one of the most unusual museums in the world.

German Curry Sausage Museum - Berlin, Germany

Isn't it a very unusual museum? In fact, there are quite a lot of museums in the world dedicated to various products, for example, canned food or bananas, located in the USA. Curry sausages are a kind of German fast food. They are very popular among the people of Germany, so it is not surprising that there is a museum dedicated to this part of German cuisine.

In this museum, you can see what ingredients this dish is made from, visit the place of the seller, in a very realistic stall (there is even the sound of a boiling kettle and frying food), try to identify spices by smell or compete with the machine in the speed of cooking sausages. Also, at the exit from the museum, you will be offered to taste real German curry sausages.

Cat Museum - Kuching, Malaysia

Cats are one of the most common pets in the world, so it's no surprise that there is an entire museum dedicated to them. At the Malaysian Cat Museum, everything is dedicated to these beautiful fluffy, purring creatures. Even the city's name, Kuching, means "cat" in Malaysian. The museum presents many items: figurines of cats, drawings, photographs, postcards and more. Also, there is information about the habits, species and physiology of these animals.

UFO Museum


The UFO Museum, located in the small town of Roswell, New Mexico, was opened in honor of the crash of a flying saucer in 1947. Exhibition halls museums are designed in the spirit science fiction, here are flying saucers, and human-sized aliens, as well as photographs, photographs and relics left after the 1947 event.


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