Course on Museums and Naval Heritage

Why this course?

The Naval Museums and Heritage Course

Immerse yourself in the fascinating history of maritime history through the study of its artifacts and stories. Learn to value, conserve, and disseminate naval heritage, exploring everything from the construction of ancient ships to the most iconic naval battles. Master collection management techniques, the design of impactful exhibitions, and heritage interpretation strategies to connect with the public. This course provides you with the necessary tools to promote knowledge and appreciation of maritime heritage.

Differential Advantages

  • Virtual visits to naval museums: Explore unique collections and learn from conservation experts.
  • Case study analysis: Study real-world examples of naval heritage management in different contexts.
  • Project development: Design proposals for enhancing the value of your region’s naval heritage.
  • Digital tools: Learn to use online resources for the dissemination and promotion of heritage.
  • Networking: Connect with industry professionals and expand your career opportunities.
Museos

Course on Museums and Naval Heritage

Availability: 1 in stock

Who is it aimed at?

  • Museum professionals seeking to deepen their knowledge of naval history, the conservation of maritime artifacts, and exhibition strategies.
  • Historians and archaeologists interested in researching naval heritage, including historic ships, shipyards, and documentary collections.
  • Educators and tour guides wishing to enrich their knowledge of maritime history and the cultural significance of ships.
  • Naval history and maritime culture enthusiasts seeking to broaden their understanding of naval heritage and its importance in society.
  • Cultural heritage managers requiring tools and strategies for heritage preservation and promotion Naval.

Practical Approach
 Designed for professionals and enthusiasts: accessible online resources, practical case studies, and exchange opportunities with industry experts.

Museos

Objectives and competencies

Cataloging and preserving naval artifacts:

Thoroughly document the origin, materials, and condition of each artifact, implementing preventive and corrective conservation protocols adapted to its typology and historical context.

Interpreting and disseminating maritime history:

“With historical rigor, contextualizing events and their socio-economic impact on the region.”

Design and manage interactive exhibitions:

“To conceptualize engaging narratives and translate them into immersive exhibition experiences, optimizing visitor flow and universal accessibility.”

Promoting understanding of the naval impact on society:

“To analyze the historical evolution of the Navy and its influence on the technological, economic and cultural development of the country.”

Develop educational programs on naval culture:

Design and implement interactive workshops on maritime history and shipbuilding.

Promote academic research on naval topics:

“To promote innovative projects on maritime safety, route optimization and new propulsion technologies.”

Curriculum - Modules

  1. Comprehensive Maritime Incident Management: protocols, roles, and chain of command for coordinated response
  2. Operational Planning and Execution: briefing, routes, weather windows, and go/no-go criteria
  3. Rapid Risk Assessment: criticality matrix, scene control, and decision-making under pressure
  4. Operational Communication: VHF/GMDSS, standardized reports, and inter-agency liaison
  5. Tactical Mobility and Safe Boarding: RHIB maneuvers, approach, mooring, and recovery
  6. Equipment and Technologies: PPE, signaling, satellite tracking, and field data logging
  7. Immediate Care of the Affected: primary assessment, hypothermia, trauma, and stabilization for evacuation
  8. Adverse Environmental Conditions: swell, Visibility, flows, and operational mitigation

    Simulation and training: critical scenarios, use of VR/AR, and exercises with performance metrics

    Documentation and continuous improvement: lessons learned, indicators (MTTA/MTTR), and SOP updates

  1. Introduction to Naval Heritage: Definition, Types, and Valuation
  2. History of Shipbuilding: Evolution of Techniques and Materials
  3. Legislation and Regulations: Protection and Conservation of Maritime Heritage
  4. Inventory and Cataloging: Methodologies and Registration Tools
  5. Conservation Status Assessment: Evaluation and Analysis Techniques
  6. Intervention and Restoration: Criteria and Methodologies for Action
  7. Enhancement and Dissemination: Communication and Promotion Strategies
  8. Management of Naval Collections: Preventive Conservation and Exhibition
  9. Maritime and Cultural Tourism: Development of Sustainable Tourism Products
  10. Financing and Sustainability: Management Models and Sources of financing

  1. Introduction to Naval Conservation: Definition, scope, and importance.
  2. Naval Materials: Identification, degradation, and conservation methods.
  3. Naval Museum Displays: Basic principles, design, and installation of exhibitions.
  4. Documentation and Cataloging: Inventory, registration, and management of naval collections.
  5. Preventive Conservation: Environmental control, handling, and storage.
  6. Legislation and Regulations: Protection of Underwater and Naval Cultural Heritage.
  7. Dissemination of Naval Heritage: Communication, marketing, and education strategies.
  8. Vessel Restoration: Methodologies, ethics, and intervention criteria.
  9. Risk Management: Identification, Evaluation and contingency plans.
  10. New Technologies applied to naval conservation, exhibition, and dissemination.

  1. Introduction to Naval Heritage: Definition, typologies, and historical value.
  2. History of Shipbuilding: Evolution of materials, techniques, and designs.
  3. Legislation and Regulations: Protection of naval heritage at the national and international levels.
  4. Naval Documentation: Types of documents, archives, and sources of information.
  5. Preventive Conservation Techniques: Environmental control, handling, and storage.
  6. Intervention in Naval Assets: Restoration and consolidation criteria.
  7. Cataloging and Inventory: Methodologies, cataloging records, and databases.
  8. Digitization of Naval Heritage: Photography, scanning, and 3D modeling techniques.
  9. Dissemination and Outreach: Exhibitions, publications, and activities Educational and cultural tourism.
  10. Management of Naval Collections: Acquisition, loan, insurance, and security.

  1. Introduction to Maritime Heritage: Definition, typologies, and value.
  2. Maritime History: Evolution of navigation, trade, and exploration.
  3. Legislation and Regulations: Protection of underwater heritage and cultural assets.
  4. Documentation and Cataloging: Inventory, registration, and databases of heritage.
  5. Preventive Conservation: Environmental control, handling, and packaging of objects.
  6. Curative Conservation: Restoration treatments of organic and inorganic materials.
  7. Museum Display: Exhibition design, lighting, and accessibility.
  8. Dissemination and Education: Educational programs, publications, and digital media.
  9. Site Management: Interpretation, signage, and tourism sustainability.

    Ethics and Responsibility: Ethical considerations in maritime heritage management.

  1. System Architecture and Components: Structural design, materials, and subsystems (mechanical, electrical, electronic, and fluid) with selection and assembly criteria for marine environments
  2. Fundamentals and Principles of Operation: Physical and engineering foundations (thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, electricity, control, and materials) that explain performance and operating limits
  3. Safety and Environmental (SHE): Risk analysis, PPE, LOTO, hazardous atmospheres, spill and waste management, and emergency response plans
  4. Applicable Regulations and Standards: IMO/ISO/IEC requirements and local regulations;
  5. Conformance criteria, certification, and best practices for operation and maintenance
  6. Inspection, testing, and diagnostics: Visual/dimensional inspection, functional testing, data analysis, and predictive techniques (vibration, thermography, fluid analysis) to identify root causes
  7. Preventive and predictive maintenance: Hourly/cycle/seasonal plans, lubrication, adjustments, calibrations, consumable replacement, post-service verification, and operational reliability
  8. Instrumentation, tools, and metrology: Measuring and testing equipment, diagnostic software, calibration and traceability; selection criteria, safe use, and storage
  9. Onboard integration and interfaces: Mechanical, electrical, fluid, and data compatibility; Sealing and watertightness, EMC/EMI, corrosion protection, and interoperability testing.

    Quality, acceptance testing, and commissioning: process and materials control, FAT/SAT, bench and sea trials, go/no-go criteria, and evidence documentation.

    Technical documentation and integrated practice: logs, checklists, reports, and a complete case study (safety → diagnosis → intervention → verification → report) applicable to any system.

Plan de estudio - Módulos

  1. Comprehensive Maritime Incident Management: protocols, roles, and chain of command for coordinated response
  2. Operational Planning and Execution: briefing, routes, weather windows, and go/no-go criteria
  3. Rapid Risk Assessment: criticality matrix, scene control, and decision-making under pressure
  4. Operational Communication: VHF/GMDSS, standardized reports, and inter-agency liaison
  5. Tactical Mobility and Safe Boarding: RHIB maneuvers, approach, mooring, and recovery
  6. Equipment and Technologies: PPE, signaling, satellite tracking, and field data logging
  7. Immediate Care of the Affected: primary assessment, hypothermia, trauma, and stabilization for evacuation
  8. Adverse Environmental Conditions: swell, Visibility, flows, and operational mitigation

    Simulation and training: critical scenarios, use of VR/AR, and exercises with performance metrics

    Documentation and continuous improvement: lessons learned, indicators (MTTA/MTTR), and SOP updates

  1. Introduction to Naval Heritage: Definition, Types, and Valuation
  2. History of Shipbuilding: Evolution of Techniques and Materials
  3. Legislation and Regulations: Protection and Conservation of Maritime Heritage
  4. Inventory and Cataloging: Methodologies and Registration Tools
  5. Conservation Status Assessment: Evaluation and Analysis Techniques
  6. Intervention and Restoration: Criteria and Methodologies for Action
  7. Enhancement and Dissemination: Communication and Promotion Strategies
  8. Management of Naval Collections: Preventive Conservation and Exhibition
  9. Maritime and Cultural Tourism: Development of Sustainable Tourism Products
  10. Financing and Sustainability: Management Models and Sources of financing

  1. Introduction to Naval Conservation: Definition, scope, and importance.
  2. Naval Materials: Identification, degradation, and conservation methods.
  3. Naval Museum Displays: Basic principles, design, and installation of exhibitions.
  4. Documentation and Cataloging: Inventory, registration, and management of naval collections.
  5. Preventive Conservation: Environmental control, handling, and storage.
  6. Legislation and Regulations: Protection of Underwater and Naval Cultural Heritage.
  7. Dissemination of Naval Heritage: Communication, marketing, and education strategies.
  8. Vessel Restoration: Methodologies, ethics, and intervention criteria.
  9. Risk Management: Identification, Evaluation and contingency plans.
  10. New Technologies applied to naval conservation, exhibition, and dissemination.

  1. Introduction to Naval Heritage: Definition, typologies, and historical value.
  2. History of Shipbuilding: Evolution of materials, techniques, and designs.
  3. Legislation and Regulations: Protection of naval heritage at the national and international levels.
  4. Naval Documentation: Types of documents, archives, and sources of information.
  5. Preventive Conservation Techniques: Environmental control, handling, and storage.
  6. Intervention in Naval Assets: Restoration and consolidation criteria.
  7. Cataloging and Inventory: Methodologies, cataloging records, and databases.
  8. Digitization of Naval Heritage: Photography, scanning, and 3D modeling techniques.
  9. Dissemination and Outreach: Exhibitions, publications, and activities Educational and cultural tourism.
  10. Management of Naval Collections: Acquisition, loan, insurance, and security.

  1. Introduction to Maritime Heritage: Definition, typologies, and value.
  2. Maritime History: Evolution of navigation, trade, and exploration.
  3. Legislation and Regulations: Protection of underwater heritage and cultural assets.
  4. Documentation and Cataloging: Inventory, registration, and databases of heritage.
  5. Preventive Conservation: Environmental control, handling, and packaging of objects.
  6. Curative Conservation: Restoration treatments of organic and inorganic materials.
  7. Museum Display: Exhibition design, lighting, and accessibility.
  8. Dissemination and Education: Educational programs, publications, and digital media.
  9. Site Management: Interpretation, signage, and tourism sustainability.

    Ethics and Responsibility: Ethical considerations in maritime heritage management.

  1. System Architecture and Components: Structural design, materials, and subsystems (mechanical, electrical, electronic, and fluid) with selection and assembly criteria for marine environments
  2. Fundamentals and Principles of Operation: Physical and engineering foundations (thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, electricity, control, and materials) that explain performance and operating limits
  3. Safety and Environmental (SHE): Risk analysis, PPE, LOTO, hazardous atmospheres, spill and waste management, and emergency response plans
  4. Applicable Regulations and Standards: IMO/ISO/IEC requirements and local regulations;
  5. Conformance criteria, certification, and best practices for operation and maintenance
  6. Inspection, testing, and diagnostics: Visual/dimensional inspection, functional testing, data analysis, and predictive techniques (vibration, thermography, fluid analysis) to identify root causes
  7. Preventive and predictive maintenance: Hourly/cycle/seasonal plans, lubrication, adjustments, calibrations, consumable replacement, post-service verification, and operational reliability
  8. Instrumentation, tools, and metrology: Measuring and testing equipment, diagnostic software, calibration and traceability; selection criteria, safe use, and storage
  9. Onboard integration and interfaces: Mechanical, electrical, fluid, and data compatibility; Sealing and watertightness, EMC/EMI, corrosion protection, and interoperability testing.

    Quality, acceptance testing, and commissioning: process and materials control, FAT/SAT, bench and sea trials, go/no-go criteria, and evidence documentation.

    Technical documentation and integrated practice: logs, checklists, reports, and a complete case study (safety → diagnosis → intervention → verification → report) applicable to any system.

  1. Introduction to Naval Conservation: History, Ethics, and Professional Standards
  2. Naval Materials: Identification, Properties, Degradation, and Conservation
  3. Documentation and Registration: Inventory, Cataloging, Photography, and Databases
  4. Environmental Control: Temperature, Humidity, Lighting, and Contaminants
  5. Preventive Conservation: Cleaning, Handling, Packaging, and Transport
  6. Conservative Intervention: Restoration, Consolidation, and Reintegration Treatments
  7. Exhibition and Design: Narrative, Accessibility, Safety, and Installation
  8. Interpretation of Naval Heritage: Communication Techniques, Guides, Panels, and Multimedia
  9. Risk Management: Emergency Plans, Fire Safety, and Vandalism
  10. Legislation and Regulations: Heritage protection, copyright, and insurance

  1. Introduction to Naval Heritage: Definition, Typology, and Value
  2. Naval History: From Antiquity to the Modern Era
  3. Documentation of Naval Heritage: Inventory, Cataloging, and Registration
  4. Preventive Conservation: Environmental Control, Handling, and Packaging
  5. Curative Conservation: Restoration and Consolidation Treatments
  6. Museum Exhibition: Design, Assembly, and Scriptwriting of Exhibitions
  7. Interpretation of Heritage: Communication, Education, and Dissemination
  8. Digital Dissemination: Online Content Creation, Social Media, and Virtual Reality
  9. Collection Management: Acquisition, Loan, and Weeding Policies
  10. Legislation and Ethics in the Conservation of Naval Heritage

  1. Introduction to Naval Heritage: Definition, typologies, and value.
  2. Naval History: From antiquity to the contemporary era.
  3. National and international legislation and regulations on naval heritage.
  4. Preventive Conservation: Factors of deterioration and mitigation strategies.
  5. Curative Conservation: Techniques and materials for the restoration of naval objects.
  6. Museum Exhibition: Design, installation, and accessibility of naval exhibitions.
  7. Collection Management: Cataloging, documentation, and digitization.
  8. Research in naval heritage: Primary and secondary sources, methodologies.
  9. Education and Outreach: Educational programs and activities for the public.
  10. Marketing and financing: Strategies for the sustainability of naval heritage.

  1. Introduction to Maritime Heritage: Definition, Typologies, and Value
  2. Legislation and Regulations: Protection of Underwater and Terrestrial Heritage
  3. Documentation and Registration: Inventory, Cataloging, and Databases
  4. Preventive Conservation Techniques: Environmental Control and Handling
  5. Packaging and Transport: Materials, Methods, and Safety Protocols
  6. Exhibition: Design, Installation, and Narrative for Different Audiences
  7. Collection Management: Organization, Access, and Digitization
  8. Heritage Interpretation: Educational Programs and Guided Tours
  9. Funding and Sustainability: Fundraising and Strategic Partnerships
  10. Professional Ethics and Social Responsibility in the Maritime heritage management

Career opportunities

  • Collections Manager: cataloging, conservation, and exhibition of naval objects.
  • Educator/Guide in Naval Museums: design and implementation of educational programs and guided tours.
  • Naval Researcher/Historian: study and documentation of maritime and naval history.
  • Naval Heritage Conservator/Restorer: preservation and restoration of ships, artifacts, and documents.
  • Cultural Project Manager: development and management of projects related to naval heritage.
  • Exhibition Technician: design and installation of exhibitions in naval museums and interpretation centers.
  • Naval Heritage Consultant: advising institutions and individuals on heritage management and conservation.
  • Naval Archivist: organization and management from documentary archives related to naval history.

“`

Admission requirements

Academic/professional profile:

Degree/Bachelor's degree in Nautical Science/Maritime Transport, Naval/Marine Engineering, or a related field; or proven professional experience in bridge/operations.

Language proficiency:

Recommended functional maritime English (SMCP) for simulations and technical materials.

5. Induction

Updated resume, copy of degree or seaman's book, ID card/passport, letter of motivation.

Technical requirements (for online):

Equipment with camera/microphone, stable connection, ≥ 24” monitor recommended for ECDIS/Radar-ARPA.

Admission process and dates

1. Online
application

(form + documents).

2. Academic review and interview

(profile/objectives/schedule compatibility).

3. Admission decision

(+ scholarship proposal if applicable).

4. Reservation of place

(deposit) and registration.

5. Induction

(access to campus, calendars, simulator guides).

Scholarships and grants

  • Discover Maritime History: Explore the richness of naval heritage through unique museums and collections.
  • Connection to the Past: Learn about historic ships, marine artifacts, and the lives of the sailors who shaped the world.
  • Heritage Conservation: Immerse yourself in the techniques of conserving and displaying naval objects for future generations.
  • Interpretation and Outreach: Develop skills to communicate the importance of maritime heritage to diverse audiences.
  • Interactive Experiences: Participate in simulations, virtual tours, and hands-on activities for total immersion in naval culture.
Become an expert in preserving and promoting our maritime heritage.

Testimonials

Frequently asked questions

Maritime history, technology and culture.

Yes. The itinerary includes ECDIS/Radar-ARPA/BRM with harbor, ocean, fog, storm, and SAR scenarios.

Online with live sessions; hybrid option for simulator/practical placements through agreements.

Maritime history, technology and culture.

Recommended functional SMCP. We offer support materials for standard phraseology.

Yes, with a relevant degree or experience in maritime/port operations. The admissions interview will confirm suitability.

Optional (3–6 months) through Companies & Collaborations and the Alumni Network.

Simulator practice (rubrics), defeat plans, SOPs, checklists, micro-tests and applied TFM.

A degree from Navalis Magna University + operational portfolio (tracks, SOPs, reports and KPIs) useful for audits and employment.

  1. Introduction to Maritime Heritage: Definition, Typologies, and Value
  2. Legislation and Regulations: Protection of Underwater and Terrestrial Heritage
  3. Documentation and Registration: Inventory, Cataloging, and Databases
  4. Preventive Conservation Techniques: Environmental Control and Handling
  5. Packaging and Transport: Materials, Methods, and Safety Protocols
  6. Exhibition: Design, Installation, and Narrative for Different Audiences
  7. Collection Management: Organization, Access, and Digitization
  8. Heritage Interpretation: Educational Programs and Guided Tours
  9. Funding and Sustainability: Fundraising and Strategic Partnerships
  10. Professional Ethics and Social Responsibility in the Maritime heritage management

Request information

  1. Complete the Application Form
  2. Attach your CV/Qualifications (if you have them to hand).
  3. Indicate your preferred cohort (January/May/September) and whether you want the hybrid option with simulator sessions.
An academic advisor will contact you within 24–48 hours to guide you through the admission process, scholarships, and compatibility with your professional schedule. Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
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