It was established by Gregory XVI (1831-1846) in 1844 in the Lateran Palace and from there it was transferred to the Vatican in 1970 by the will of John XXIII.
It houses Greek originals, Greek copies from the Roman age and Roman sculptures ranging from the 1st to the 3rd century AD. Famous is the group of Athena and Marsyas from a Greek original by Myron (about 450 BC).
The Gregorian Profane Museum includes materials which, for the most part, come from excavations and finds carried out in the Papal State.
It is divided into five main sections:
Among the works on display, of notable interest are the Roman copies of the Athena and Marsyas group of Mirone (about 450 BC) and a portrait of Sophocles, from a Greek original of the 4th century; Furthermore, ample space is dedicated to the Hebrew lapidary department, in which 137 inscriptions in Greek or Latin on sepulchral slabs are collected from the Monteverde catacomb, discovered in 1602 but explored in 1904-1906, whose finds date back to the I-III century A.D.
Address: Viale Vaticano, Musei Vaticani, 00120, Stato Vaticano
Roma (RM) Lazio
Latitude: 41.90624561758993
Longitude: 12.453550100326538
Site: http://www.museivaticani.va/co...
vCard created by: CHO.earth
Currently owned by: CHO.earth
Type: Building
Function: Museum
Creation date: 29-10-2019 11:48
Last update: 07/07/2022