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6 museums selected in this guide.

The Oceanographic Museum of Monaco (Musée Océanographique) is a marine science museum founded by Prince Albert I in 1910. Built into the cliff face of Le Rocher, the monumental building houses one of Europe's finest aquariums and decades of oceanographic research.
Villa Paloma is one of two sites of the Nouveau Musée National de Monaco (NMNM), housed in a 1913 Belle Époque villa. It focuses on contemporary art with rotating exhibitions that engage with Monaco's cultural and social identity.
Villa Sauber is the second venue of the Nouveau Musée National de Monaco (NMNM), a charming Belle Époque villa near the Larvotto beach. Its exhibitions explore the intersection of art and performing arts, drawing on Monaco's rich theatrical heritage.

The Museum of Prehistoric Anthropology of Monaco presents archaeological findings from the Monaco region and the wider western Mediterranean. Founded in 1902 by Prince Albert I, it documents human habitation from the Paleolithic to the Bronze Age.

The Chapelle de la Visitation is a 17th-century Baroque chapel on Place de la Visitation in Monaco-Ville. It houses a notable collection of sacred art assembled from Italian Baroque masters, including works by Rubens, Zurbarán, and Ribera.

The Collection de Voitures Anciennes (Collection of Vintage Cars) displays Prince Rainier III's personal collection of over 100 classic automobiles. Located in Fontvieille, it spans a century of motoring history from a 1903 De Dion-Bouton to modern Formula 1 cars.