Rome Airports

Rome Airports guide providing useful information about the airports of Rome including transfers and transportations, but also car rental, hotels, airport news.

    Museums
   
 

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Capitolini Museum

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Best History Roman Museums

The Capitoline Museums (Italian Musei Capitolini) are a group of art and archeological museums in Piazza del Campidoglio,
on top of the famous Capitoline Hill in Rome, Italy. The museums are contained in three palazzi surrounding a central trapezoidal piazza in a plan conceived by Michelangelo Buonarroti in 1536 and executed over a period of over 400 years.
The history of the museums can be traced to 1471, when Pope Sixtus IV donated a collection of important ancient bronzes to the people of Rome and located them on Capitoline Hill.
Since then, the museums' collection has grown to include a large number of ancient Roman statues, inscriptions,and other artifacts; a collection of medieval and Renaissance art; and collections of jewels, coins, and other items.
The museums are owned and operated by the municipality of Rome.

The statue of a mounted rider in the centre of the piazza is of Emperor Marcus Aurelius.
It is a copy, the original being housed on-site in the Capitoline museum. Many Roman statues were destroyed on the
orders of Christian Church authorities in the Middle Ages;
this statue was preserved in the erroneous belief that it depicted the Emperor Constantine, who made Christianity
the official state religion of the Roman empire.

 

Pope Sixtus IV was responsible for the creation of the Musei Capitolini's nucleus when in 1471 he donated to the Roman People some bronze statues that had previously been housed in the Lateran (the She-Wolf, the Spinarius, the Camillus and the colossal head of Constantine, with hand and globe).
The return to the city of some traces of Rome's past greatness was made even more important by their collocation on the Capitoline Hill, the centre of ancient Roman religious life and seat of the civilian magistrature from the Middle Ages onwards, after a period of long decline.

The sculptures had intitially been arranged on the external façade and courtyard of the Palazzo dei Conservatori. The originary nucleus shortly became enriched by the subsequent acquisition of finds from excavations taking place in the city, all of which were closely linked to the history of ancient Rome.

During the middle of the 16th Century a number of important pieces of sculpture were set out on the Capitoline Hill (including the gilded bronze statue of Hercules from the Boarius Forum, the marble fragments of the acrolith of Constantine from the Basilica of Maxentium, the three relief panels showing the works of Marcus Aurelius,
the so-called Capitoline Brutus, and important inscriptions (including the Capitoline Fasti, discovered in the Roman Forum).

The two colossal statues of the Tiber and the Nile, currently outside the Palazzo Senatorio, were moved at about the same time to Palazzo del Quirinale, while the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius was brought form the Lateran in 1538 on the wishes of Pope Paul III.

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Capitolini Museums: Price Ticket 9Euro

Entrance:Tuesday to Sunday, from 9.00am to 8.00pm

Closed on Monday and December 25, January 1st.

Last Sunday of every month Free Etrance

Entrance is on the top of the Campidoglio hill (Piazza Venezzia)

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