#6 Look for the (possible) Holy Grail at Museo del Tesoro
Just past the chapel of St John the Baptist and housed in an atmospheric crypt, the Museo del Tesoro holds a polished quartz plate on which, legend says, Salome received John the Baptist’s severed head; a green bowl brought to Genoa in the eleventh century and believed once to have been the Holy Grail; and a reliquary believed to contain a lock of the Virgin Mary’s hair.
#7 Gawp at some paintings by Luca Cambiaso at Museo Diocesano
Behind the cathedral, the Museo Diocesano occupies a partially frescoed cloister and the medieval buildings that surround it displays religious art and sculpture, including paintings by Luca Cambiaso. Look out for the dozen or so dyed blue cloths from the early sixteenth century depicting various scenes from the Passion of Christ.
#8 Wander around Piazza Soziglia
The busiest and more obviously appealing part of old Genoa lies to the north of Via San Lorenzo. Just off the cathedral’s square, tiny Piazza Invrea gives on to the shopping square of the Campetto and adjacent Via degli Orefici, “Street of the Goldsmiths”.
Much of the jewellery here is still made by hand at upper-storey workshops around the Campetto, which links to the genteel sliver of Piazza Soziglia, crowded with stalls and café tables.
#9 See a grand family home at Galleria Nazionale di Palazzo Spinola
Tucked away off Via San Luca, the excellent Galleria Nazionale di Palazzo Spinola is Genoa’s best example of a grand family palace, with original furniture and rooms crammed with high-quality paintings.
There are Van Dyck portraits of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John as men of books, a portrait of Paolo Spinola by the Rome-based German painter Angelika Kaufmann, and upstairs an intensely mournful Ecce Homo by the Sicilian master Antonello da Messina.
Rough Guides tip: Don’t miss the little terrace, way up on the spine of the roof and shaded with orange and lemon trees.
#10 Visit the Museo del Risorgimento, birthplace of Giuseppe Mazzini
A short walk from the Palazzo Spinola is the Museo del Risorgimento, the birthplace of one of the most influential activists of Italian Unification, Giuseppe Mazzini, in 1805.
As you might expect, this is quite a shrine to the great man and indeed to the Risorgimento in general, with documents and relics from Mazzini’s life, lots of paintings and other artworks relating to the Unification struggle, and personal effects from other local heroes, including Mazzini’s fellow Genoese, Goffredo Mameli and Nino Bixio.