'' from the Palazzo Massimo
History of the building The palace was built on the site once occupied by the
Villa Montalto-Peretti, named after
Pope Sixtus V. The present building was commissioned by Prince
Massimiliano Massimo, so as to give a seat to the Jesuit
Roman College, originally within the convent of the
Church of St. Ignatius of Loyola at Campus Martius. In 1871, the College had been ousted from the convent by the government which converted it into the
Liceo Visconti, the first secular public high school of Italy. Erected between 1883 and 1887 by the architect
Camillo Pistrucci in
Neo-Renaissance style, it was one of the most prestigious schools of Rome until 1960. During
World War II, it was partially used as a
military hospital, but it then returned to scholastic functions after the war only until the 1960s, when the school was moved to a newer seat in the EUR quarter. In 1981, when the palace was lying in a state of neglect and disrepair, the
Italian Government acquired it for 19 billion lira and granted it to the National Roman Museum. Its restoration and adaptation began in 1983 and was completed in 1998. The palace eventually became the main seat of the museum as well as the headquarters of the Agency of the Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities of Italy (), in charge for the archaeological heritage of Rome. The museum houses the ancient art (sculptures, paintings, mosaics and goldsmiths’ crafts from the Republican Age to the Late Antiquity) as well as the numismatic collection, housed in the
Medagliere, i.e. the coin cabinet.
Ground floor and first floor The ground floor features the notable bronze statues of the
Boxer at Rest and the
Athlete. One room is devoted to the
mummy that was found in 1964 on the
Via Cassia, inside a richly decorated
sarcophagus with several
artefacts in
amber and pieces of
jewellery also on display. Sculptures of the period between the late
Roman Republic and the early
imperial period (2nd century BC to 1st century AD), include: • Tivoli General •
Tiber Apollo •
Tiber Dionysus •
Via Labicana Augustus •
Aphrodite of Menophantos •
Hermes Ludovisi from
Anzio •
Torlonia Vase •
Sleeping Hermaphroditus •
Dionysus Sardanapalus •
Portonaccio sarcophagus Second floor Frescoes, stuccoes and mosaics, including those from the
villa of Livia, wife of
Augustus, at
Prima Porta on the
Via Flaminia. It begins with the summer
triclinium of Livia's
Villa ad Gallinas Albas. The frescoes, discovered in 1863 and dating back to the 1st century BC, show a luscious garden with ornamental plants and
pomegranate trees.
Basement The Museum's numismatic collection is the largest in Italy. Among the coins on exhibit are
Theodoric’s
medallion, the four
ducats of
Pope Paul II with the
navicella of
Saint Peter, and the silver
piastre of the
Papal State with views of the city of
Rome. ==Palazzo Altemps==