The Museum is situated in Todi, in the eastern side of Piazza del Popolo, one of the most beautiful squares in Italy, the political and religious centre of the city. It is located on the top floor of the Palace of Podestà and Palace of Capitano del Popolo, both built starting from the 13th century. The itinerary inside includes a visit to the City Museum, with materials that illustrate the most important stages in Todi’s history. Five different sections follow. The first, the archaeological one, includes Attic pottery with red and black figures, objects for domestic use or as female ornaments and votive bronzes, evidence of the close commercial ties between Todi and nearby Volsinii (Orvieto). The second section, the numismatic one, includes coins from pre-Roman to modern times, for a total of 1475 examples, 130 of which made by the Tuder Mint. Then there is a section with textiles and a section with ceramics, including pottery, mainly of common use, with items from the eighth to the eighteenth century: the latest is hosted in a wonderful hall decorated with portraits of some illustrious men of Todi, a fresco of the city and its territory by Pietro Paolo Sensini and the legend of the foundation of Todi by Ignazio Mei from Fabriano. In the Pinacoteca (Picture Gallery), in addition to a large altarpiece by Giovanni di Pietro known as Lo Spagna, depicting the Coronation of the Virgin, there are numerous seventeenth-century canvas that prove direct relationships between Rome and the local figurative culture.