Roman, Etruscan, and Egyptian antiquities at the National Archaeological Museum of Parma, Italy
Roman, Etruscan, and Egyptian antiquities at the National Archaeological Museum of Parma, Italy. This museum was established in 1760 to house artifacts recovered from the excavations of the Roman city of Veleia. It's collections now include Egyptian, Etruscan and Roman materials spanning a period from the Palaeolithic to the Early Middle Ages. From Veleia, the museum displays fragments of the Tabula Alimentaria Traianea and of the Lex de Gallia Cisalpina , figurative bronzes, ornaments and coins, as well as twelve marble statues of members of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. Through donations in the 18th and 19th centuries the museum also acquired ancient sculptures once belonging to the Gonzaga of Guastalla and the Farnese collections as well as numismatic collections of Greek currency, Greek and Etruscan ceramics and Egyptian objects.
Sculptures of Julio-Claudians recovered from excavations in Veleia. Image courtesy of the National Archaeological Museum of Parma.
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