Details / Roman-Germanic Museum
The Roman-Germanic Museum, called similarly Römisch-Germanisches Museum in German, is a very wealthy museum in Germany. Here you can find a large various collection of Roman artworks remained from the roman settlement, a villa at the 3rd century, once placed where Cologne is now. This villa was revealed in 1941, after then the museum was built around here by the architects Klaus Renner and Heinz Röcke.
In this place, which was built around 220-230 AD, a tomb of legionnaire Pblicius was found and it is displayed in the museum now. Here you can find the as well as world's largest collection of roman glasses and roman medieval jewellery, portraits, inscriptions and many daily objects that roman people used to use in daily life. Besides these stuff the roman mosaics are mostly the valuable pieces of the museum.
You can visit the museum from tuesday to sunday between 10:00 and 17:00. There are also public tours you can attend sundays at 11:30. You can arrive the museum by using bus and train, it is located in the center of the city.
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