Museum of the Risorgimento and of the Contemporary Age
The Museum of the Risorgimento and of the Contemporary Age in Vicenza preserves documents, artefacts, and artworks tracing the city’s involvement in the struggle for Italian unification and its subsequent history through the twentieth century. Housed within the historic fabric of the city, its collections span uniforms, weapons, proclamations, and personal memorabilia from the Risorgimento campaigns of 1848 and 1866, continuing through the two World Wars to the postwar Republican era.
At a glance
- Type
- History and civic museum
- Period
- Collections spanning 1848 to the late 20th century
- Style
- Historic civic building
- Location
- Vicenza, Veneto, Italy
- Coordinates
- 45.4078° N, 11.8769° E
Overview
The Museum of the Risorgimento and of the Contemporary Age is one of Vicenza’s key civic heritage institutions, dedicated to the political and military history of unified Italy from the mid-nineteenth century onward. Its permanent collections document how the people of Vicenza and the surrounding Veneto participated in the patriotic uprisings that eventually led to the Kingdom of Italy in 1861. Temporary exhibitions regularly complement the permanent display, connecting historical events to present-day civic identity.
History
Vicenza played a direct role in the Risorgimento: the city witnessed fierce fighting during the Piedmontese and Austrian campaigns of 1848–49, and the Veneto was finally annexed to the Kingdom of Italy in 1866 following the Third War of Independence. The museum was founded to collect and display the material evidence of these events, preserving the memory of local volunteers, military officers, and political figures who shaped the region’s path to unification. Over subsequent decades the collection expanded to encompass memorabilia from the First and Second World Wars, reflecting the city’s continued sacrifice in national conflicts.
What you see
Visitors encounter an extensive array of period artefacts: uniforms and weapons from the mid-nineteenth-century campaigns, proclamations and printed ephemera, portraits of Risorgimento figures such as Garibaldi and Cavour, and photographs documenting the wars of the twentieth century. Regimental flags, military decorations, and personal diaries round out the collection, giving an intimate sense of individual lives shaped by national history. The museum’s layout follows a broadly chronological narrative, guiding visitors from the revolutionary 1840s through to the post-World War II decades.
Cultural significance
As a repository of Veneto’s path to Italian nationhood, the museum occupies an important place in the region’s cultural memory, complementing Vicenza’s better-known Palladian architectural heritage with a civic and political dimension. Its collections are a primary resource for historians of the Risorgimento and of twentieth-century Italy, preserving documents and objects that might otherwise have been lost.
Practical information
- Location
- Vicenza, Veneto, Italy
- Hours
- Check official website for current opening times and admission fees
- Admission
- Check official website
Getting there
Vicenza is served by frequent rail connections from Venice (approx. 50 minutes) and Verona (approx. 30 minutes). From Vicenza railway station the historic centre, where the museum is located, is reachable on foot in roughly 10–15 minutes. City buses also connect the station to the centre. By car, Vicenza is on the A4 motorway (Venice–Milan axis); follow signs for the historic centre and use designated parking areas.
