Septem Maria Museum
Adria
The Septem Maria Museum was inaugurated on 21 November 1998, on the outskirts of Adria. It is located in the engine room of the Amolara hydrovore where you can admire two centrifugal pumps in excellent state of preservation. It took the name 'seven seas' from Pliny the Elder to justify the location in this area of a museum that traces the history of water. Inside, you can see a reproduction of the engraving by Filippo Cluverio in which the Septum Maria area is indicated. In other environments you can see pumps, old tools, educational panels, etc.
Museo Etnografico
Fratta Polesine
Museo dei Grandi Fiumi
Rovigo
The Great Rivers Museum was built inside a former monastery of the Olivetani, which stands on the banks of the territory of the Polesine. In his exhibitions we find a collection of ceramics (dating from the fourteenth and eighteenth century), historical and archaeological testimonies since the prehistoric period. This is a collection of objects and documents of great importance for the area. Interested parties are free to visit it.
Museo Archeologico Nazionale
Adria
The museum is located in the historic part of the city. It is divided into three floors and is equipped with a public garden in which the archaeological evidence of the city is preserved. The finds originate from the ancient city with burials of different periods.
Casa-Museo Matteotti
Fratta Polesine
GIACOMO MATTEOTTI, HOME TO GIACOMO MATTEOTTI, ASSERTOR OF FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY, RECOVERED THANKS TO THE INTERVENTION OF THE MUNICIPALITY OF FRATTA POLESINE AND THE ACADEMY OF CONCORDI IN ROVIGO, AFTER RESTORATION AND INSTALLATION, IT IS CURRENTLY OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ON SATURDAY AFTERNOONS AND HOLIDAYS.
Pinacoteca del Seminario Vescovile
Rovigo
In 1982, the Art Gallery of the Episcopal Seminary was entrusted to the Accademia dei Concordi (1580), ending in fact the reunification of the original Silvestri collection. Thus, a rich art gallery of about 200 works of Venetian art from the fifteenth to the eighteenth century is established, among which some masterpieces known all over the world stand out. In addition, in several windows, pre-Roman and Roman archaeological finds are preserved in black, red and gray ceramics, dating from the fourth to the first century BC.