The Lapidary Museum was officially inaugurated on 26 September 2009 and is located in some areas of St. Giovanni Battista ancient convent, renowned as “Monastero delle Lucrezie“. It is named after Lucrezia della Genga, a noble woman from Ancona who passed a building behind the town walls on her twelve sisters, members of the Third Order of Saint Francis (Secular Franciscan Order) in 1425. A large number of lapidary ruins are shielded in the apse of the old Church dedicated to St. Giovanni and in the two adjacent halls. The remains witness the long history of the town from the Roman Age to the Renaissance up to modern times: a collection among the most ancient ones in Umbria, after Gubbio.