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Nicolas Sursock was a Lebanese art collector and a prominent member of one of the aristocratic families of Beirut. ==Legacy== Nicolas Sursock died in 1952 and is probably best known for bequeathing his 19th century private villa to the city of Beirut, to be transformed into a museum of modern art. The villa is now known as the Nicolas Sursock Museum. ;Last Will and Testament :''"As I love fine arts and long for their expansion, particularly in my homeland, Lebanon, as I wish this country would receive a substantial part of fine arts, and my fellow citizens would appreciate art and develop an artistic instinct, for this purpose that I pursue and that I can only be beneficial and contribute to Lebanon's development, I wish there would exist in Beirut, capital of the Republic of Lebanon, museums and exhibition rooms open to everyone, where master-pieces and antiques would be preserved and displayed.'' :''"…I therefore set up in the form of ''waqf'' (mortmain) all of the real estate and its contents form a museum for arts, ancient and modern, coming from the territory of the Republic of Lebanon, the other Arab countries or elsewhere, as well as a room where the Lebanese artists' works shall be exhibited. It being understood that this museum shall remain eternally and perpetually (…)"'' — Nicolas Sursock 〔(Darat al Funun currently on )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Nicolas Sursock」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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