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5 museums selected in this guide.

Castello Ursino is a 13th-century Swabian-Norman fortress commissioned by Emperor Frederick II. Originally built on a coastal cliff, the 1669 Etna eruption pushed the lava-stone shoreline outward, leaving the castle landlocked. Today it houses the Museo Civico, with an eclectic collection spanning Greek, Roman, and medieval artefacts.
The Museo Emilio Greco is a small museum dedicated to the work of sculptor and engraver Emilio Greco (1913–1995), born in Catania. Housed in a historic building near Via Crociferi, it displays bronze sculptures, lithographs, and drawings spanning the artist's career.
The Museo del Cinema di Catania is a niche museum housed inside Le Ciminiere cultural complex, dedicated to the history of cinema from its earliest mechanical precursors to the digital age. The collection includes rare projectors, vintage cameras, and Sicilian film memorabilia.
The Museo Civico Belliniano is a small but moving museum housed in the apartment where Vincenzo Bellini was born on 3 November 1801. It preserves the composer's personal effects, manuscripts, letters, and the harpsichord on which he learned to play as a child prodigy.

The Museo Storico dello Sbarco in Sicilia 1943 is a World War II museum dedicated to Operation Husky — the Allied invasion of Sicily in July 1943. Located inside the cultural complex Le Ciminiere (former sulphur refineries), it uses immersive reconstructions, original artefacts, and testimonies to tell the story of the liberation.