Civic Museum of Bevagna: Palazzo Lepri and its Museum
A Neoclassical Palace
The Civic Museum of Bevagna is housed in Palazzo Lepri, an eighteenth-century gem designed by Andrea Vici, a pupil of Luigi Vanvitelli. Acquired by the municipality after the earthquake of 1832, the palace is not merely a container for artworks but the first and most important exhibit of the collection itself, having served as the Town Hall for over a century.
The Collections: between Archaeology and Painting
The museum itinerary unfolds as a dialogue between different historical periods.
The Archaeological Section: it originated from the eighteenth-century bequest of the scholar Abbot Fabio Alberti—whose finds are still embedded along the main staircase, including the remains of a colossal Roman statue—and tells the story of ancient Mevania. First an Umbrian centre and later a thriving Roman municipium, its importance is attested by a valuable hoard of Republican coins and by a significant local production of sandstone cinerary urns dating to the 2nd-1st centuries BC.
The Picture Gallery: Formed primarily as a result of post-Unification state confiscations, the picture gallery offers a rich overview of Umbrian figurative culture from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. Among the highlights are the Immaculate Conception by Andrea Camassei, the moving Cassa of Blessed Giacomo by Ascensidonio Spacca, known as il Fantino, as well as works by Dono Doni and Corrado Giaquinto. Of particular interest is the wooden scale model of the Church of Our Lady of Grace, created by the architect Valentino Martelli.














