Complesso monumentale della Pilotta - Museo archeologico nazionale di Parma
Type:
Luoghi della cultura; Ente/Istituzione
Category:
Archaeology museums
The museum was founded in 1760 by Philip of Bourbon
to preserve the artifacts which were found in the Roman Municipium
Veleia, including the famous bronze, Tabula Alimentaria, and was later
expanded with the purchase of local collections and archeological finds;
in 1867 one of the first prehistoric collections in Italy was created.
It
is divided into two sections. One which includes the finds of the
spectacular historical collections from Veleia, including marble statues
of the 12 characters of the imperial family Giulio-claudia (The first
half of the first century AD), large ceramic Greek, Italic and Etruscan
and the prestigious Egyptian section with sarcophagi, canopic jars,
papyri, bronzes and votives as well as the important Magnarini
Collection (429 Scarab Seals dated from 2100 to 525 BC). This valuable
area is not usually open to the public. The section that conserves
the traces of the province of Parma includes prehistoric materials from
the Paleolithic to the Bronze Age (very important are the Neolithic
finds which includes some burials, and those of the "Terramare Culture"
from the Bronze Age), Protohistory (Etruscan and Ligurian) , Romans
(statues, architectural fragments, mosaics, funerary inscriptions from
Parma and from the territory and a wealth of jewels and coins of the
third century) and Lombard (jewelry from some tombs).
Contacts:
responsible: Simone Verde - website: http://pilotta.beniculturali.it/ - email: cm-pil@beniculturali.it - email-certificata: mbac-cm-pil@mailcert.beniculturali.it - tel: +39 0521 233718 - fax: +39 0521 386112
Spatial coverage:
piazza della Pilotta , 15 - 43100, Parma (Parma), Emilia-Romagna - Italia