"A. Santarelli" Archaeological Museum in Forli, Italy

"A. Santarelli" Archaeological Museum in Forli, Italy.
This museum's exhibits range from the Paleolithic (site of Cà Belvedere di Monte Poggiolo, about 800,000 years ago) to the 7th century CE. Bronze Age artifacts include objects recovered from ancient Coriano, an Umbrian, Etruscan, and finally Roman colony. Objects include weapons, armor and grave goods. From the Roman Forum Livi in Forli, some geometric mosaics in black and white, epigraphs, a beautiful female head in marble of the first century CE, a bas-relief with a scene of sacrifice from the villa of Fiumana and the Teodoric-era mosaics from Meldola. The forum in Forli was built in approximately 188 BCE by the consul Gaius Livius Salinator, who fought Hasdrubal Barca at the battle of the Metaurus River in 207 BCE. In 88 BCE, the city was destroyed during the civil wars of Gaius Marius and Sulla but later rebuilt by the praetor Livius Clodius. The museum also houses a coin collection of over 7094 Roman and medieval coins and a large display of ancient ceramics. Call ahead to verify opening times as this museum has been under renovation.


Image: Gilded Silver Ostrogothic buckle at the Archaeological Museum in Forli, Italy. Courtesy of the museum.

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