The Musée le Vergeur is a museum in Reims. It is located in the Hotel le Vergeur, a 13th century mansion built in a neighborhood inhabited by wealthy shopkeepers. In the 16th century, the building belonged to Nicolas le Vergeur, a bourgeois from Reims who transformed the house, giving it the appearance of a hotel particulier with Renaissance-looking interior facades, arranged around a courtyard. In the 19th century, the owner Hugues krafft (1853-1935) began to assemble a large collection with objects taken from his travels around the world. It consisted of objects, clothes, photographs that formed the core of an ethnographic fund. Upon his death, the rich collections of furniture and objets d'art formed the heart of the Musée le Vergeur, which today offers a strong immersion into 19th-century bourgeois interiors. The collections have been enriched over the years thanks to donations and acquisitions. In particular, the museum preserves the complete and original series of prints of Duerer's "Apocalypse" and "Great Passion".