The Civic Archaeological Museum of Casteggio and Oltrepo Pavese in Casteggio, Italy
The Civic Archaeological Museum of Casteggio and Oltrepo Pavese in Casteggio, Italy.
Casteggio, a town in the Lombardy region of Italy about 38 miles south of Milan, was once known as Clastidium, a Ligurian settlement belonging to the Marici tribe. It was the site of the defeat of the Marici by the legions under the command of Marcus Claudius Marcellus in 222 BCE. In 218 BCE, it regained its independence briefly after Hannibal's army defeated the Romans nearby. Rome regained control in 197 BCE and the settlement was annexed to the colony of Piacenza and remained subordinate until the fall of the Western Roman Empire.
The museum's exhibits include ceramic vases, stone tools, bronze objects, and a Celtic head, from the Neolithic period to the arrival of the Celtic peoples in the 2nd century BCE. Roman artifacts include funerary monuments from the excavation of the necropolis of the Pleba area in 1987, glass objects including imported objects from the Rhine area, religious statuettes, and personal care items.
Image: Roman cosmetic box courtesy of the museum.
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