THE DELMAS-ORFILLA-ROUVIÈRE MUSEUM (DOR)

Less well known than the anatomy museum but just as remarkable, the DOR museum houses a unique collection acquired by the faculty in 2011.

2011

date of acquisition of the DOR collections donation

8000

anatomical parts referenced

2014

year the DOR museum was inaugurated

A huge donation at the origin of the Delmas-Orfilla-Rouvière Museum

In 2011, the Faculty of Medicine accepted an exceptional donation: the collections of the former Delmas-Orfila-Rouvière anatomical museums, formerly located on the premises of the Faculty of Medicine in Paris, estimated to contain more than 8,000 items dating from the19th and20th centuries. With this donation, Montpellier's anatomical collections now total more than 13,600 items classified as historical monuments.

Three physicians and anatomists contributed to the enrichment of the Parisian collections during the19th and20th centuries : Mateu Josep Bonaventura Orfila, physician and founder of the anatomy department at the Paris School of Medicine in 1844, followed by Henri Rouvière (1876-1952) and André Delmas (1910-1999).

The one-of-a-kind Spitzner Collection

This remarkable educational collection is complemented by a special collection from Pierre Spitzner's (1833-1896) traveling museum. In 1856, he founded the Grand Musée Anatomique et Ethnologique(Great Anatomical and Ethnological Museum) in Paris, which later became a traveling anatomical museum in Northern Europe before settling permanently in Brussels in the 1920s to 1960s. As traveling museums were intended to attract the general public at fairs as a lucrative attraction, some of the pieces in the collection (299 pieces) are spectacular in nature, such as the Venuses.

In 2014, the Delmas-Orfila-Rouvière exhibition hall was inaugurated in the historic building to showcase a selection of the most beautiful pieces from the Paris collections.

The Sleeping Venus

A wax automaton equipped with a breathing mechanism, the Sleeping Venus was the only piece in Pierre Spitzner's (1833-1896) traveling anatomical museum collection to be exhibited outside the traveling museum.

Its role? To attract the curiosity of the public and invite them inside the fairground booth, which presented the scientific and medical news of the day, as well as a broad overview of common diseases entitled "social hygiene collection," for the purposes of moralization and education.

Honoré Fragonard

Honoré Fragonard (1732–1799) was director and professor of anatomy at the National Veterinary School of Alfort for six years (1766–1771) before being appointed director of anatomical studies at the École Pratique in Paris. He is best known for his dry anatomical preparations, which he sometimes staged in an artistic manner.

The Delmas-Orfila-Rouvière room displays two natural specimens created by Honoré Fragonard. One of them is a natural anatomical preparation of a monkey showing its mummified muscular system.

Louis Auzoux's gorilla

Impressive for its musculature and expressive gaze, Louis Auzoux's anatomical model of a gorilla is a life-size dissection model that reveals the animal's complex anatomy.

Napoleon III received a female gorilla from Gabon as a diplomatic gift. After expressing his desire to the Emperor to dissect a large ape, Louis Auzoux was fortunate enough to obtain the gorilla, which had been transported from Gabon in a barrel of alcohol, upon its death in 1863.

The full-scale plastic model was completed between 1866 and 1867.

Practical information

The DOR museum is not open to the public. However, a visit to this museum is included in the guided tour of the faculty's historic building organized by the Montpellier Méditerranée Métropole Tourist Office.

  • Contact Tourist Office: +33 (0) 4 67 60 60 60

The historical heritage of the Faculty of Medicine is managed by the Department of Scientific Culture and Historical Heritage(DCSPH) and two of its services (University of Montpellier).