Villa Durazzo Pallavicini – Ligurian Archeology Museum

Villa Durazzo Pallavicini – Ligurian Archeology Museum — via Wikimedia Commons
Villa Durazzo Pallavicini – Ligurian Archeology Museum · via Wikimedia Commons
Genova, Liguria · 18th–19th centuries

Villa Durazzo Pallavicini

A neoclassical villa in Genoa’s western quarter, now home to the Ligurian Archeology Museum. Its ten-hectare park ranks among Europe’s finest historic gardens.

At a glance

Villa Durazzo Pallavicini stands in Pegli, a residential district near Genoa’s waterfront. The municipality has owned the property since its conversion into a museum. It houses the Ligurian Archeology Museum, featuring archaeological finds spanning from the Paleolithic era through the Roman period and beyond.

History

The complex traces its roots to an eighteenth-century mansion built by the Grimaldi family. In subsequent generations, the Durazzo and Pallavicini families—all interconnected through marriage—acquired and developed the property. The villa and park assumed their present form during the mid-nineteenth century.

The Ligurian Archeology Museum was inaugurated in 1936 but temporarily relocated during World War II. Collections moved to the abbey of Tiglieto for safekeeping. The museum reopened in 1953 with the scholarly collaboration of Luigi Bernabò Brea and fellow researcher Cardini.

What you see

The villa exemplifies neoclassical design typical of nineteenth-century Ligurian noble residences. Its park encompasses nearly ten hectares, including a botanical garden named for the noblewoman Clelia Durazzo. The landscape ranks among the major historic gardens in Europe.

Cultural significance

The museum preserves the material history of Liguria across millennia. Its core exhibition documents the peoples who inhabited the region from 100,000 years ago through the end of the Roman Empire, including climatic changes that shaped settlement patterns. Artifacts from the Riviera di Ponente caves—Balzi Rossi, Toirano, and Finalese—illustrate prehistoric life. Iron Age Ligurian warrior burials and the pre-Roman necropolis of Genoa itself provide insight into indigenous societies.

Broader collections include Roman-period Ligurian cities, Egyptian antiquities from the Albertis collection, and ancient Greek and Roman vases donated by Prince Oddone of Savoy. Together, these holdings survey the cultures that shaped the western Mediterranean.

Key facts

  • Address: Via Ignazio Pallavicini, 13, 16155 Genova
  • Coordinates: 44.4294205555596, 8.8172847032547
  • Phone: 010 8531544
  • Website: https://www.villadurazzopallavicini.it/

Practical information

The villa is open to the public as a museum. Check the official website for current hours, admission fees, and any restrictions.

Getting there

The entrance is located directly next to Genoa-Pegli railway station, making it easily accessible by train from central Genoa. Pegli lies in the western reaches of the city along the coast.

Sources & resources

Editorial text © Cultural Heritage Online. Based on the Cultural Heritage Online legacy archive.

Find it on the map

📷 Diventa un fotografo di Cultural Heritage Online

Condividi le tue foto dei luoghi: restano pubblicate con la tua firma come autore. Più vengono viste, più ti fai conoscere — e presto un concorso premierà le foto più apprezzate.

Accedi o registrati gratis per aggiungere una foto
📋 Copy & share on social
Scroll to Top