The museum is divided into several collections:
The collections of coins and engraved gems The numismatic heritage has about 8,000 pieces divided between Greek, Roman republican and imperial, Celtic, late antique and Byzantine coins. The collection of carvings (
scarabs, gems, engraved glass paste and
cameos) and digital rings includes a total of 66 specimens of unknown provenance. However, a first nucleus was acquired by the founder of the Museum, Pier Vittorio Aldini, while others arrived through donations, we remember in particular that of the rector Arcangelo Spedalieri (1779-1823) who wanted to leave his small (29 gold coins, 300 silver and only 76 bronze) but rich collection of Greek, Roman, Byzantine, medieval and modern coins, almost all of Sicilian origin. The eighteenth-century numismatic collecting in Pavia is well represented by the collection of coins formed throughout the eighteenth century by three generations of representatives of the Bellisomi family and finally donated to the University in 1821, it consists mainly of Roman coins, both republican and imperial. Again through donations, the collection of Marquis Stefano Bernardo Majnoni, a native of Intignano and probably the most active and cultured collector of the first half of the nineteenth century in
Lombardy, also enriched the museum's assets. In particular, Majnoni studied and collected
Kufic,
Sassanid coins and coins from the Greek mints of the East and left to the university a nucleus of archaic coins from
Sybaris, from the Greek cities of Asia and provincial Romans.
Collection of prehistoric artifacts These are finds from various Lombard settlements: stone and bone tools, chipped and polished flints, scraper blades, arrowheads. The protohistoric pottery is of coarse dough and worked by hand. Also conserved are a spearhead and bronze
fibulae, bracelets and rings, some decorated with globes. These finds represent the substratum of indigenous cultures of northern Italy, then subjected to the Romanization process.
Egyptian and Oriental Collection The Egyptian collection, begun around 1845, is made up of two mummies (one intact female and one male of which only the head is possessed) and objects from funerary contexts:
ushabti, a papyrus from
Amduat, which recounts the nocturnal journey of the Sun and figures in painted wood recomposed under restoration in an inlaid mummy board, almost unique in the Italian Egyptological collections. Extraneous to the Egyptian world is the clay figurine, of Syrian origin, datable between 2000 and 1800 BC.
Southern Italian, Etruscan and Roman pottery collection The collection consists of a group of Apulian vases, probably of funerary origin, which belonged to the Milanese sculptor
Giovanni Battista Comolli and acquired in 1831 and two bell
hydriai, which arrived between 1929 and 1948 thanks to Carlo Albizzati, professor of Archeology in the
University of Pavia. But Etruscan-Italic
black-glazed Ware and a large
Volterra krater are also preserved, without forgetting the Roman production, as evidenced by table pottery,
terra sigillata and
amphorae.
Collection of Etruscan ex-voto clay The civilization of peninsular Italy before the Roman conquest is witnessed in the Museum as well as by ceramics, by a precious
Umbrian bronze statuette of a warrior (mid-5th century BC) and by the extraordinary series of votive terracottas, donated by Pope
Pius XI in 1934 to the University of Pavia, in the form of heads and anatomical parts, dating back to the Hellenistic age, from
Caere, today's
Cerveteri. These finds, originally deposited in the
Vatican Museums, reached Pavia thanks to the commitment of Carlo Albizzati.
Gypsotheque Also belonging to the Archaeological Museum is the
Gipsoteca (about thirty pieces) which preserves plaster casts on a 1:1 scale of famous works of classical sculpture, from the archaic age to Hellenism, such as the Discobolus, Apollo Sauroktònos, the Nike of Samothrace or the Aphrodite of Milo. The casts, recently restored, were purchased in the first half of the twentieth century in France and at the Milanese laboratory of Carlo Campi, who worked at the service of the
Brera Academy. ==References==