Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum

Museum · Ofen

Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum

Museum · Ofen

1

Budapest, Tárnok u. 18, 1014 Hungary

Photos

Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by Dylan Thuras (Dylan Thuras)
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by Dylan Thuras (Dylan Thuras)
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by Dylan Thuras (Dylan Thuras)
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by Dylan Thuras (Dylan Thuras)
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by Jaszmina Szendrey (Atlas Obscura User)
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by reley250 (Atlas Obscura User)
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by Dylan Thuras (Dylan Thuras)
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by Dylan Thuras (Dylan Thuras)
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by Dylan Thuras (Dylan Thuras)
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null
Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum by null

Highlights

Antique medical & pharmacy objects, mummy powder, hanging bats  

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Budapest, Tárnok u. 18, 1014 Hungary Get directions

semmelweismuseum.hu

Information

Static Map

Budapest, Tárnok u. 18, 1014 Hungary Get directions

+36 1 375 9772
semmelweismuseum.hu

Features

restroom
wheelchair accessible parking lot

Last updated

Aug 9, 2025

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What Ho, Apothecary! 18 Intriguing Pharmacy Museums

"What began as a private collection of pharmaceutical oddities in 1896 became a museum in 1948. Called a collection of “Historical Chemist Relics,” it is better described as an alchemy museum. Among the curious items in this small museum is a bottle of Ambra Grisea Malac (Ambergris, or Sperm Whale vomit), for use on “Lean, thin, emaciated persons who take cold easily” and those who “with great sadness, sit for days weeping.” Besides the hanging bats, lizards and crocodiles, worth looking for is the box of mumia or mummy powder. Easily spotted by the decaying head on top, it is what it sounds like: the powder is made of ground-up mummies meant to be eaten or applied as a salve. All of which was the result of a poor translation. The Arabs were very fond of using Bitumen (a tar like substance) in their medicine. It bubbled up from the ground in the mountains of Persia and was an excellent way to staunch wounds. They called this stuff mumia. After the Arabs invaded Egypt, they also began calling those cloth wrapped bodies the Ancient Egyptians left laying everywhere mumia as well. They thought the bodies were prepared with bitumen, like the Greeks and Romans embalmed their dead (in fact they weren’t; the Egyptian mummies were prepared with a natural salt.) In the twelfth century, aided by the crusades, and a poor translation by Gerard of Cremona, it was decided that bitumen and mumia were one and the same. The black stuff came from mummies, and mummies were prepared in the black stuff, so you could use one for the other. By the 1400s the mummy trade was in full effect. Mummy powder was being used for everything from epilepsy to upset stomaches. Of course, mummies are rather hard to come by. The entire stock of thousands of mummies (likely the Guanche aristocracy) found on Canary Island was used up in a matter of years. Merchants even began making new mummies to satisfy the demands. They would buy the recently deceased, stuff them full of herbs and leave them out to dry. By the 1600s mummies were big business and everyone who was anyone used it. Francis Bacon loved it, so did Francis I of France. Shakespeare wrote about it in Othello and Macbeth, while his son-in-law John Hall prescribed it to his ill patients. The mummy trade eventually slowed mainly due to a tightening of Egyptian government on the practice, and the ever more difficult process of finding and smuggling authentic mummies. Mummy was still available in the catalog of Merck as late as 1908: “Genuine Egyptian mummy, as long as the supply lasts, 17 marks 50 per kilogram.” The jar of mumia at the Golden Eagle Pharmacy Museum is a rare little reminder of this past." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

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Bianca W

Google
Very small museum! This pharmacy museum is interesting, but tiny. There are a lot of collection pieces on display, unfortunately not a lot of information for each piece. There are guides in many different languages, but they only give cursory information on what things are, not what they were used for or deeper history. The exhibits are very nice, but it's so small, there should at least be more in-depth information available!

Saraid Cann

Google
A tiny and charming museum with three rooms of fascinating artifacts and information. The two people there when we went were absolutely lovely and happy to share their knowledge. It's very cheap to get in and worth it for the quirky bat and crocodiles hanging from the ceiling.

Uke Yaoi Fan

Google
It's a very interesting little musuem that only costs HUF 2000 to visit. There is an English language (and others) guide available for free with your ticket at the entrance. Don't forget to look up in one of the rooms to see the animal hanging from the ceiling! I can imagine Albedo, sucrose, and Edward Elric working together in the alchemy lab :3

Nick Bateman

Google
Great to see this place has reopened. Brilliant little exhibition of the weird and wonderful history of medicine with bizarre artefacts from pharmacies across the country. Stand outs include the box of mummy powder and the mock-up of the pharmacists ‘lab’ with skulls and hanging taxidermied creatures.

Bea Rimini

Google
Nice and quick visit of this ancient pharmacy, as a pharmacist I appreciated a lot the instruments, the apothecary vase etc; the owner was very nice too. 3€ price

Louise Brown

Google
Got there at 3.30 this afternoon, well, 3.27, only to be told they were closing in three minutes despite the website saying open til 6 and the sign out front saying open til 5.30. When we went outside again and looked at the sign and the old woman followed us and kept pointing at rhe sign, highlighting the closing time. Which said 17.30... Anyway, if you're going maybe best to go earlier in the day, just in case...

Intrepid Odžačar

Google
Fascinating little museum. Sadly I had only 10 minutes to see it as the cashier decided to close 30 minutes early. Of course, she only told me that after I had already given her the money for the ticket.

Patrice Caillaux

Google
Don’t visit this museum; the young lady at the reception is really dishonest with old people