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Museum of Roman Civilization

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Italo Gismondi's model of ancient Rome.

The Museum of the Roman Civilization (Italian "Museo della Civiltà Romana") is a museum in Rome (Esposizione Universale Roma district), devoted to the aspects of the Ancient Roman civilization.

It was designed by the architects Pietro Ascheri, D. Bernardini and Cesare Pascoletti[1] (1939-1941). Its 59 sections illustrate the history of Roman civilization, from the origins to the 4th century, with models and reproductions, as well as original material. The premises are shared with a planetarium.

It houses, among other things:

  • two famous scale models of ancient Rome by Italo Gismondi, derived from the Forma Urbis Romae map and integrated with archeological discoveries - one as it was in the early Republican period and one in the era of Constantine I. This model is at a 1:250 scale and is made of plaster. The model was begun in 1935 and completed in 1971.
  • examples of late imperial and early Christian art
  • a complete sequence of casts of the spiral reliefs round Trajan's Column, arranged in horizontal rows at ground level to facilitate reading.
  • a reconstructed Roman library based on that in the Villa Adriana at Tivoli [1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Buildings of Europe: Rome, section 191, Christopher Woodward, Manchester University Press, Manchester, 1995, ISBN 0-7190-4032-9

[edit] External links




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