The exhibition is organized in five sections. The first section is dedicated to the collection of Canoni Chelli, founder of the Museum. It collects around one hundred extremely heterogeneous objects, mostly foreign to the Maremma.
The second section is entirely dedicated to the history of the city of Roselle from its foundation to the latest acquaintances of the modern age. The exhibition has benefited from new and numerous deposits granted by the Superintendency of the Archaeological Heritage that has been excavating the site of the city for fifty years.
The third section is dedicated to the archeology of the Maremma from prehistory to late antiquity.
The next section is a museum in the museum: it houses the Museum of Sacred Art of the Diocese of Grosseto entrusted since 1975 by the Bishop and the Chapter of the Cathedral to the City of Grosseto for the exhibition. Also in the case of the Diocesan Museum the new system has seen a considerable enrichment in the number and quality of the exhibited works, as a result of new deposits from the cathedral of Grosseto and other churches of the Diocese.
The last section is dedicated to the history of the city of Grosseto and in general to the Middle Ages.
The exposition is divided into five sections.
The first section is dedicated to the collection of the Canon Chelli, founder of the Museum. It hosts almost a hundred very heterogeneous objects, mostly coming from the outside of the Maremma.
The second section is dedicated to the history of the town of Roselle, from the foundation to the last use of the site. The exhibition has been enriched by the superintendency which has been carrying out excavations on the ancient town for fifty years.
The third section is dedicated to the archeology of the Maremma, from prehistory to late Antiquity.
The Museum of the Sacred Art of Grosseto The City of Grosseto is the diocese of the City of Grosseto. Also in this case, this is the result of an increase in both the quantity and the quality of the works exhibited.
Grosseto and introduction to the Middle Ages.