Key visual of the exhibition «Visiting Royals. From Sisi to Queen Elizabeth»

Visiting Royals

From Sisi to Queen Elizabeth

Exhibition | accessibility.time_to

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Exhibition

Although Switzerland has no royal tradition, royal families have long held a certain fascination for the Swiss; not least because they brought pomp and splendour to the country and celebrated their power there. Many crowned heads of state have visited Switzerland since the 19th century. For example, King Ludwig II of Bavaria was so taken by the William Tell story that he travelled to Lake Lucerne in 1865 and wanted to buy the Rütli meadow so he could build a castle on it. Then there was Charles-Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, nephew of the great Napoleon I and subsequently Emperor of the French, who spent a lot of his childhood at Arenenberg Castle after his family went into exile. Charles-Louis spoke with a proper Thurgau accent and attended military school in Thun. The fate of Sisi, Empress of Austria, is among the best known and most poignant experiences of a royal in Switzerland. She often visited the country for rest and recuperation, and was murdered in Geneva in 1898. All royal visits, whether by an emperor, empress, king, queen, prince or princess, and for whatever reason, whether politics, business or personal, had one thing in common: they triggered – both then and now – immense excitement and fascination among the Swiss public. The exhibition demonstrates this through many pictures and exclusive possessions of these bluebloods.

 

The exhibition will be on display in an adapted form at the Château de Prangins from 19 March to 10 October 2027.

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Media

The media conference on the exhibition is taking place on 11.6.2025 at 10:00 at the National Museum Zurich.

The media folder and materials are available for download from this date.

accessibility.sr-only.person_card_info National Museum Zurich press contact

+41 44 218 65 64 medien@nationalmuseum.ch

Exhibition imprint

  • Overall management Denise Tonella
  • Project direction Rebecca Sanders
  • Curators and Concept Michael van Orsouw, Rebecca Sanders
  • Scenography Raphaël Barbier, Corseaux
  • Exhibition graphic Hopping Mad, Zürich
  • Project coordination Teresa Ranft
  • Advisory committee Roman Aebersold, Günhan Akarçay, Heidi Amrein, Beat Högger, Sabrina Médioni, Denise Tonella
  • Project controlling Sabrina Médioni
  • Cultural services and museum education Lisa Engi, Vera Humbel
  • Technical management Ladina Fait, Mike Zaugg
  • Exhibition construction Ira Allemann, Marc Hägeli, Philippe Leuthardt, Julia Rusterholz, Dave Schwitter
  • Conservation management Anna Jurt
  • Conservation and mounting of objects Nikki Calonder, Natalie Ellwanger, Anna Jurt, Sarah Longrée, Jürg Mathys, Ulrike Rothenhäusler
  • Object logistics and assembly Christian Affentranger, David Blazquez, Simon d’Hollosy, Reto Hegetschweiler, Aymeric Nager
  • Loans Cristina Kaufmann, Laura Mosimann, Claudio Stefanutto
  • Photography Jörg Brandt, Felix Jungo
  • Picture library Ronja Eggenschwiler, Andrea Kunz, Fabian Müller
  • IT | Web Alex Baur Medienstationen | Bornes interactives | Postazioni interattive | Media stations Alex Baur, Thomas Bucher, Ueli Heiniger, Pasquale Pollastro, Danilo Rüttimann
  • Marketing and Communication Anna-Britta Maag, Sebastiano Mereu, Carole Neuenschwander, Alexander Rechsteiner
  • Advertising graphic Roli Hofer
  • Translations Marie-Claude Buch-Chalayer, Bill Gilonis, Marco Marcacci, Laurence Neuffer

Items generously loaned by

  • Dorothy Beriger Chapman, Bern
  • Benediktinerinnenkloster Au, Trachslau bei Einsiedeln
  • Bundesamt für Kultur, Bern
  • Christoph Merian Stiftung, Basel
  • Fridolin Fassbind, Meggen
  • Lukas Fassbind, Oberarth
  • Adrian Frutiger, Trimmis
  • Heimatmuseum, Küssnacht am Rigi
  • Josephinum – Medizinhistorisches Museum Wien, MedUni Wien
  • Kantonsbibliothek Vadiana, St.Gallen
  • Kloster Einsiedeln
  • Musée d’art et d’histoire, Fribourg
  • Napoleonmuseum Arenenberg, Salenstein
  • Schweizerisches Bundesarchiv, Bern
  • Staatsarchiv Basel
  • Staatsarchiv Schwyz
  • Staatsarchiv Thurgau, Frauenfeld
  • Staatsarchiv Uri, Altdorf
  • Stadtarchiv Bern
  • Stadtarchiv St.Gallen
  • Stiftung für Kunst, Kultur und Geschichte, Winterthur
  • Tell-Museumsgesellschaft Uri
  • Wittelsbacher Ausgleichsfonds, München