Ikizevler City Museum
![Ikizevler City Museum](/upload/gallery/20249/17797-tiuuaoykvy-1920.jpg)
Gümüşhane İkizevler City Museum, which opened to visitors in July 2006, is a typical example of historical Gümüşhane Mansions. The mansion, whose construction date dates back to 1920, was restored between 2004-2006. The building, which consists of ground, first floor and attic in the garden, was built in the technique of filling between wooden frame and it is plastered. The entrance of the museum, which consists of two separate mansions, is provided with wooden double wing doors on the ground floor and 1st floor. The first floor, which has a çık-protrusion at the front, is supported by wooden beams underneath and has a rectangular window opening. This place, called 'under the eaves' in the local language, was used as a room and was arranged as a service place. The roof of the building, whose southwestern facade is adjacent to the order, is crushed and covered with sheet metal. The museum, which has a wide usage area by combining two separate mansions, has a kitchen, warehouse, three living rooms, two corridors, an intermediate room and a sink on the ground floor. The entrance to the ground part is provided with a double wing wooden door. There is a guest room, a mother-in-law room, a children's bedroom, a cellar, an intermediate hall, a section where local rug looms are exhibited, a bride-groom room, a guest room and a kitchen, on the first floor of which only one of the mansion can be reached with an internal staircase. The first floor has two double-wing doors that provide entrance and exit. The attic is expanded after restoration and divided into two large halls. In these halls, there are ten showcases where ethnographic works are exhibited. The works belong to the Ottoman period and the near period.