Museo Nazionale Romano, Crypta Balbi

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Roma, Italy

museonazionaleromano.beniculturali.it
Archaeological museum· History museum

Museo Nazionale Romano, Crypta Balbi Reviews | Rating 4.1 out of 5 stars (8 reviews)

Museo Nazionale Romano, Crypta Balbi is located in Roma, Italy on Via delle Botteghe Oscure, 31. Museo Nazionale Romano, Crypta Balbi is rated 4.1 out of 5 in the category archaeological museum in Italy.

Address

Via delle Botteghe Oscure, 31

Phone

+39 66977671

Amenities

Good for kidsToiletsNo restaurant

Accessibility

Assisted listening devicesWheelchair-accessible entranceWheelchair-accessible liftWheelchair-accessible toilet

Open hours

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R

Rodrigo Diez

Excellent place. Guided tours at specific hours, take note of that!

S

SASIDHARAN. C.P

ITALIAN RUNNING A INDIAN RESTAURANT VEGETARIAN AND LIBRARY ALSO SANSKRIT CLASS

P

Paul Graves

Good, not great museum on the history of how Rome built on ruins. Interesting collection of items found while digging to put another building up.

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Cassandra Walker

I understand why this is the least visited National Museum; there is not much on offer here. Would save the 13, I’m afraid. There are a lot of pots and info to read but not much to see really. I’m still not even entirely sure what we saw.

V

Vivi Keram

It was obvious that they tried really hard to set it up the best the could. It was very difficult to understand exactly what it was, I tried to watch the video because it looked interesting but it was in Italian I waited for the English version but it was too long. It is worthy of a small visit though .

A

Alasdair Ewen

Of all the National Museum sites, I found this the most interesting. Not packed full of art and sculpture, instead a trip through time down through the structure of the city itself. The underpinnings of Rome, excavated and down layer by layer as the city grew.

J

Joe Philipsen

Totally worth the visit. The museum will walk you through the 2,000 hear history of this site and shows the artifacts recovered at each level, explaining what theyean and how they got there

D

Daggy Boy

As part of a combined ticket giving you access to 4 sites we though this was great value. Again it tells a roman story with artefacts from the immediate area including palazzo and churches going back centuries on display. The crypt reveals layers of history including some roads and cisterns and show the changes over time. Shame later incarnations of society in Medieval and Renaissance times failed to learn from history (what’s new?) when it came to water storage, hydraulics and sewerage management. Instead of learning from and improving it they buried it instead.