Museo Nazionale degli Strumenti Musicali
Typology:
State Museum
Address
Address:
Piazza di Santa Croce in Gerusalemme, 9/A
Zone:
Rione Esquilino (Termini-Via Nazionale) (Roma centro)
Contacts
Telephone:
06 7014796 - 06 7024153 info visite guidate
Online purchase:
www.gebart.it/musei/museo-nazionale-degli-strumenti-musicali
Telephone booking:
06 32810 (dal lunedì al venerdì dalle 9.30 alle 18.00)
Opening times
From Tuesday to Sunday from 9.30 to 19.30 (last admission at 19.00)
Closed on Mondays, and 25 December
Information
€ 6.00 full
€ 2.00 reduced (citizens aged between 18 and 25 years of age of the European Union)
Free admission on the first Sunday of every month.
Reservations required for groups of 5 to 20 people including the guide.
Reservation by mail and / or telephone. Cost of booking € 1.00.
Entrance tickets for the Museum can be purchased on site, online at www.gebart.it/musei/museo-nazionale-degli-strumenti-musicali
and by phone at 06 32810 (Monday to Friday from 9.30 to 18.00)
Agreement with
Roma Pass
Today's events
Note perdute. Il restauro del liuto di Vendelino Tieffenbrucker
(Manifestations)
from 2024-03-16 to 2024-11-03
Scheduled events
Festival Popolare Italiano. Canti e corde, mantici e ottoni. X edizione
(Music)
from 2024-04-05 to 2024-05-24
Description
The National Museum of Musical Instruments was inaugurated in 1974 and is located in the former Barracks "Principe di Piemonte" near the Basilica of Holy Cross in Jerusalem.
The collection developed around the collection donated to the State in 1950 by the tenor Evan Gorga (1865-1957), with the successive addition of instruments from the Museum of Piazza Venezia and the Museum of History of the Popular Traditions.
About 840 of the 3,000 pieces of the collection are exhibited. The history of music from the first Greek and Roman ancient wind and percussion instruments up to the ones used today is reconstructed in 18 halls. Instruments of popular and cultured, religious and military music, instruments of non-European musica ltradition coming from Africa, Oceania, and America are exhibited. Pieces of particular interest are the Barberini harp of the seventeenth century, the Italian vertical harpsichord, and the pianoforte built in 1722 by Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655-1732), universally acknowledged as the inventor of this type of instrument.
The collection developed around the collection donated to the State in 1950 by the tenor Evan Gorga (1865-1957), with the successive addition of instruments from the Museum of Piazza Venezia and the Museum of History of the Popular Traditions.
About 840 of the 3,000 pieces of the collection are exhibited. The history of music from the first Greek and Roman ancient wind and percussion instruments up to the ones used today is reconstructed in 18 halls. Instruments of popular and cultured, religious and military music, instruments of non-European musica ltradition coming from Africa, Oceania, and America are exhibited. Pieces of particular interest are the Barberini harp of the seventeenth century, the Italian vertical harpsichord, and the pianoforte built in 1722 by Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655-1732), universally acknowledged as the inventor of this type of instrument.
Services
» Bookshop
» Library
Other museums of the network
Culture and leisure › Cultural heritage › Museums
See also
Events and shows › Manifestations
For more information
Culture and leisure › Cultural heritage › Museums
Last checked:
2023-04-20 16:37