Discover the various lives of the city of Lisbon, from the Roman age when it was called Felicitas Julia Olisipo to artefacts from 300, 000 BC.
The Museu de Lisboa is one of the places where you can learn more about Lisbon’s many lives down the ages – as well as the history which transformed it into one of the world’s most important and interesting cities.
At Palácio Pimenta, an 18th-century summer house in Campo Grande, you’ll find a collection of paintings, ceramics, engravings, maps, azulejo tiles and archaeological finds that reveal the city’s urban, social, economic and symbolic development.
From ancient artefacts – dating back to 300, 000 BC – to a model of the pre-earthquake city, there are various reasons for discovering the Palácio Pimenta and the city’s history.