Marconi Museum and Mausoleum

The Museum and Mausoleum of Guglielmo Marconi is a museum and burial structure for the Italian scientist, inventor, and engineer, Guglielmo Marconi. The tomb is located adjacent to the 17th-century Villa Griffone/Villa Marconi, located on via Celestini #1 in Pontecchio Marconi, about 15 kilometers outside the city of Bologna in Emilia Romagna, Italy.

Villa Marconi in background with Marconi's tomb in foreground.

Museum and Foundation

The Museo Marconi celebrates the discoveries and advances of the Marconi in the areas of electricity and radio communication, as well as a general history of the development of radiocommunication. It houses some of the scientific instruments and products used and developed by Marconi and others. The villa also houses the Fondazione Guglielmo Marconi and the Ugo Bordoni Foundation.[1]

Mausoleum

A few years after the death of Marconi in 1937, in the midst of the Second World War, the Mussolini government interred Guglielmo, who had been an avowed fascist sympathizer, and his second Maria Cristina Bezzi Scali in an underground hypogeum-tomb, designed by Marcello Piacentini, and sporting a column with Marconi's bust by Arturo Dazzi. The tomb, as with many fascist architectural monuments, hearkens back to Etruscan (and ancient Roman) models of tombs with a simple entrance to an underground chamber beneath a tumulus.[2]

gollark: So what you're saying is that when something stops being subjective is subjective?
gollark: "Agreed upon" doesn't mean "objective".
gollark: Just because a lot of people say "this music is bad", does not mean that that somehow is an objective property of it.
gollark: It's still subjective even if people agree on it a lot!
gollark: WRONG!

References

  1. Fondazione Guglielmo Marconi, foundation and museum site.
  2. Emilia Romagna, by Touring Club Italiano, page 277.
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