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You are in: Home » Culture and leisure » Cultural heritage » Archaeological heritage » Domus Romane di Palazzo Valentini
Typology: Villas and archaeological areas

Address

Address: Foro Traiano, 85
Zone: Rione Monti (Colosseo-S.Giovanni-S.Maria Maggiore) (Roma centro)
Di fronte alla Colonna Traiana

Contacts

Opening times

OPENING DAYS
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday from 10.00  to 19.00 (last admission 18.00)
EXTRAORDINARY OPENINGS from 4th August 2023 to 10th September 2023
Friday, Saturday, Sunday from 19.00  to 24.00 (last admission 23.00)


CLOSING DAYS 1st of May, 15th of August

Before your visit, check the information on opening hours at this link >
Opening times

ATTENTION PLEASE: it is strictly forbidden to take inside big bags and backpacks.

Information

Adults € 12,00
Reduced € 8,00 for UE and SEE citizens over 65 legal residents of the City of Rome, children (6 - 17 years old), special agreement made with the Provincial Administration
Reduced € 6,00 for schools

Admission is free for children under 6, visitors with disabilities and their assistant, teachers accompanying classes

RESERVATION FEE € 1,50

Tickets can be booked and purchased as following:
- Call Center 06 87165343
- Online
- TicketOne's retails outlets

Groups must book by contacting the Reservation Centre by e-mail info@tosc.it.

Reservation recommended within the day before.

The visit to the Archeological area takes place on different floor levels. Disabled or physically impeded visitors are recommended to inform the call center and book the entrance.

Modalità di partecipazione: Booking required

Agreement with

Roma Pass

Scheduled events

Description

ARCHAEOLOGICAL AREA OF THE DOMUS ROMANE

The archaeological excavations under Palazzo Valentini open to the public on a permanent basis from October 16, 2010 and the new archaeological area of the Domus Romane will enhance the art and historic heritage of Rome.
The project for the recent works, the research and the conversion of the area into a museum carried out by art historians, archaeologists and architects, working together with the Provincial Government, has achieved excellent results that reveal the importance of this area during the Roman era and provide new information on the ancient and mediaeval topography of the city of Rome.

The evocative tour runs though the ruins of patrician “Domus” of the imperial era belonging to powerful families of the times, perhaps senators, and the houses are decorated with mosaics, wall paintings, polychrome and paved floors, and other artefacts. Piero Angela and a team of engineers and experts, such as Paco Lanciano and Gaetano Capasso, have enhanced the site and revived the past by creating virtual reconstructions, visual effects and films.
Visitors will be able to see the walls, rooms, peristyles, baths, receiving rooms, decorations, kitchens and furniture “come back to life” and to experience a virtual journey inside an important ancient RomanDomus. A large plastic model of the area as it appeared in Roman times, and showing the various stages of Palazzo Valentini, completes the tour. This maquette enables visitors to visualize the numerous historic stratifications and place themselves inside the urban fabric. it is a unique and important example of how art heritage of the past, that has been recovered by a process of careful and scrupulous restoration and requalification, can be enhanced thanks to the use of innovative technology.

Works on Palazzo Valentini started at the end of the 16th century and was promoted by Cardinal Michele Bonelli, nephew of Pope Pio V. The cardinal had supported a vast operation to reclaim the area of the Fori Imperiali. At this stage, building may have been supervised by Brother Domenico Paganelli who designed the trapezoidal plan of the edifice. it was closed off from piazza SS. Apostoli by an elegant façade, and in the 17th century a series of conversions and extensions were commissioned by Cardinal Carlo Bonelli. At the beginning of the 18th century, the palazzo was rented to Prince Ruspoli and his family and, among others, was lived in by the composer G. F. Haendel. in the mid 18th century, the entire building was purchased by Cardinal Giuseppe Spinelli who housed the vast library of the Imperial Forum consisting of more than twenty four thousand books in it, and opened its doors to the public. in 1827 the building was purchased by the banker Vincenzo Valentini who turned it into his residence and promoted the completion of the works towards the Forum. In 1873, after the palazzo became the property of the Provincial Deputation of Rome, renovation work was carried out and new extensions were added to turn it into the Provincial Council headquarters.

Educational activities

 

 

See also

Culture and leisure › Cultural heritage › Architectural and historical heritage
Last checked: 2024-01-11 11:05