The Musée Dobrée is a museum in Nantes. It is located in the historic city center, in the Graslin district, near the Natural History Museum. Between 1862 and 1895, the collector Thomas Dobrée built a neo-medieval building, with a double function: place of residence and exhibition space for his collections. At the time of construction, the building already included an elevated structure and a tower erected during the 15th century. After his death, Thomas Dobrée bequeathed his collections and the whole site to the department of the Lower Loire, which therefore made it a museum, opened to the public in 1899, three years after the collector's death. The museum has since expanded thanks to further donations and acquisitions, including an archaeological collection that preserves Greek, Etruscan and Latin artifacts. The rest of the Musée Dobrée collection consists of around 135,000 works, including sculptures, paintings, objects of applied art, drawings and engravings from the Middle Ages to the modern era. Among these, the refined reliquary of the Anne de Bretagne stands out in particular, stolen in the night between 13 and 14 April 2018 together with other works and found a few weeks later.