The Town Hall of Trevignano Romano houses the Etrusco-Roman Public Museum with the lavish grave goods of two tombs from the Olivetello necropolis: the Annesi Piacentini and the Flabelli tombs discovered in the 1960s.
The grave goods include clay and bucchero ceramic objects as well as artefacts in gold, silver, iron and bronze. Two large oriental-style amphoras that are unique, dating to the end of the VII century, portray a nuptial procession with a two-horse carriage, a panther and some lotus flowers.
There is also a large, embossed, bronze ceremonial fan, composed of concentric trapezoids, dating from the VII century. In one of the showcases in the Museum there are small fragments of iron that have been delicately pieced together to reconstruct a gig and a carriage, symbols of social status.
A tomb dating back to the VIII century is a rare relic of the museum - a piece of earth which contains the grave goods and arms of an ancient warrior.
The Roman Age includes a marble tombstone with engravings and a delicate bas-relief with vine branches and bunches of grapes. Pictures and reproductions of objects, often rather original, made by the pupils of the school and exhibited in the Museum are charming for the love of ancient objects the youngsters show.


































