Recently I went to the city of Leiden to visit a museum that had been on my “to visit” list for quite some time. The museum’s name is CORPUS and the tagline is “journey through the human body.”
At the museum you move through a large replica body learning how everything inside works via what you are seeing in front of you (imagine large teeth and a beating heart) and the audio guide you are given before the start of your tour (you can choose from Dutch, English, German, French, Spanish Italian, Russian or Chinese).
As you move throughout the museum in small groups, the majority of the information you experience is through the visual bits you are moving around and the information you are listening to but every so often there is a 3D film, comfy chairs or relevant smells (pleasant ones only!). My favourite section was when we were in the nose. The whole room smelt like roses growing outside in spring.
The whole tour through the body takes about 55 minutes, after which you make your way back down to reception via floors of interactive exhibits, activities and information.
Was it the best museum I had been to? No. Was it interesting? Yes.
The tours run on a time-slot system so if you do book tickets online, you will have to specify a time in advance. For further information visit: http://www.corpusexperience.nl/en/corpus-experience
And in case thinking about the CORPUS museum has you thinking about body words in Dutch, here is a handy list for you.
Body Words in Dutch
- de achterwerk/de billen/de kont (butt/behind)
- de arm (arm)
- de borst (breast/chest)
- de buik (stomach)
- de duim (thumb)
- de hand (hand)
- de kin (chin)
- de lip (lip)
- de middelvinger (middle finger)
- de mond (mouth)
- de nagel (nail)
- de nek/de hals (neck)
- de neus (nose)
- de pink (pinkie)
- de ringvinger (ring finger)
- de rug (back)
- de schouder (shoulder)
- de teen (toe)
- de tong (tongue)
- de vinger (finger)
- de voet (foot)
- de wang (cheek)
- de wijsvinger (pointer finger)
- de wimper (eyelash)
- het been (leg)
- het haar (hair)
- het hoofd (head)
het knee (knee)de knie (knee) – thanks Hanneke for spotting the error- het lichaam (body)
- het oog (eye)
- het ooglid (eyelid)









