The remarkable story behind the prehistoric museum Prince Albert II visited on Italian border

Prince Albert II paid a visit on Monday to the Balzi Rossi museum, a prehistoric site on the Italian Riviera just a short distance from the French border, near Ventimiglia.

The Prince was welcomed by the town’s mayor, Flavio Di Muro, and the museum’s director, Antonella Traverso. He toured the museum’s two main exhibition spaces, which cover Upper Palaeolithic burials, the history of early excavation campaigns, and artefacts recovered from the Grotte du Prince, the deepest cave in the complex at 34 metres, with 23 metres of archaeological deposits. The cave, which sits to the west of Cap de Garavan, remains the property of the Grimaldi family.

The Prince welcomed at the museum, photo credit: FrĂ©dĂ©ric Nebinger, Prince’s Palace

The connection between Monaco and the site dates back to 1882, when, Prince Albert I struck an agreement with the then-owner of the land specifically to prevent quarry works from destroying the prehistoric deposits. At the time, the museum didn’t exist yet.

He later founded both Monaco’s Museum of Prehistoric Anthropology and the Institut de PalĂ©ontologie Humaine in Paris to study and preserve the findings.

Layers of history stretching back 400,000 years

The Grotte du Prince has yielded extraordinary discoveries over the decades. The site’s first museum director, LĂ©once de Villeneuve, uncovered evidence of Neanderthal occupation: tools, hunted animals and Mousterian remains dating from roughly 90,000 to 40,000 years ago.

Prince Albert II in the cave, photo credit: FrĂ©dĂ©ric Nebinger, Prince’s Palace

Later, researchers Louis Barral and Suzanne Simone pushed the timeline back further still, identifying human occupation dating to 220,000 years, as well as a remarkably ancient female human remain, a fragment of pelvis, recently 3D-modelled in collaboration with Italian colleagues.

The cave also serves as a long-term reference point for climate change, with its layers recording environmental shifts spanning more than 400,000 years. Research teams from Monaco’s Museum of Prehistoric Anthropology continue to work on the site regularly, combining archaeology with environmental science. However, the cave remains little known to the public.

Those wishing to explore the subject further can visit the exhibition De ToumaĂŻ Ă  Sapiens at Monaco’s Museum of Prehistoric Anthropology, running until 16th October 2026

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Main photo credit: FrĂ©dĂ©ric Nebinger, Prince’s Palace

Interview Dr Raha Didevar: there’s a new psychologist in town, and she’s not just here to listen

Monaco has no shortage of excellence: top schools, world-class healthcare, safety that residents don’t take for granted. But when it comes to emotional health – especially within high-pressure families, international marriages, and globally mobile childhoods – support can be harder to find than it should be.

That’s why the arrival of Dr Raha Didevar is significant.

She’s the kind of psychologist who doesn’t hide behind clichĂ©s. In conversation, she’s warm, quick to laugh, and very clear about what she believes: therapy should do something. Not just validate feelings, but help people move – towards clarity, structure, boundaries, and better decisions.

And in a place like Monaco, where appearances can be immaculate while family life is anything but, that approach may be exactly what many households have been missing.

“It’s taboo to say there’s a problem”

Dr Didevar’s work focuses on couples, families, children and adolescents, particularly within the expat community, where identity is layered and life feels like constant adaptation.

She’s frank about what she’s observed: plenty of families struggle, but few admit it. “There are so many families with problems, but it’s still very much taboo. Nobody wants to say there’s an issue.”

Her view is the opposite. Therapy isn’t a last resort. It’s maintenance.

“You don’t need to have a mental disorder to be in therapy. I think everyone should be in therapy. There’s no person in this world who doesn’t have problems. What happens is you store everything inside, and then it overloads. As you age, it affects you physically. The mind is powerful. If your mind isn’t at peace, your body struggles too.”

From Kenya to Monaco

Born in Tehran, Dr Didevar moved to London at age two after her father’s death when she was six. She began boarding school in England at eight, learning independence early.

Her path to psychology was unconventional. After studying at the University of Texas, she worked as an NBC news reporter and NBA sportscaster. But her direction changed after volunteering in Kenya in 2005, where she founded a humanitarian organisation supporting girls escaping female genital mutilation.

She later taught high school in Los Angeles, working with gang-involved teenagers, before earning two master’s degrees and a doctorate in Depth Clinical Psychology at the Carl Jung Institute in Santa Barbara.

In 2011, while two months pregnant, she lost her fiancĂ© Prince Ali-Reza Pahlavi, younger son of Iran’s last Shah. She gave birth to their daughter, Princess Iryana Pahlavi.

For Dr Didevar, that legacy isn’t about status. She raised her daughter emphasising humility over privilege, choosing environments like Bali that reflected spirituality and grounded values.

“I tried to raise her to be humble – not ‘I come from royalty, I’m a princess’. For me, we are all human. We all came from the same place and we’re going to the same place.”

Until her daughter turned six, birthday parties meant bringing secondhand toys to orphanages the next day. “I wanted her to interact with the kids and give the toys. When she turned six, she asked, ‘Do you think this year I can have a birthday present?’ I said yes—because you’ve earned it. Everything is about earning and knowing the value.”

Solutions, not endless sessions

Ask Dr Didevar what makes her different, and she says frustration with traditional therapeutic models.

“By law in the U.S., psychologists aren’t allowed to give advice. You sit there and let clients find their way. For me, that was frustrating. I don’t like taking people’s money without getting to the point. That clichĂ© – ‘So tell me, how does that make you feel?’ – it’s frustrating.”

In contrast, her approach blends psychoanalysis with life coaching. “You tell me what’s wrong, and we come up with solutions together. I give you ideas, because when you’re in the problem, you don’t know which direction to go.”

Her message is: if therapy is endless, it becomes expensive avoidance. If it is practical, it becomes life-changing.

Working with children: when resistance drops

Dr Didevar tailors her approach based on age and emotional development. Under six, formal therapy rarely works, she says. Between six and nine, she uses art therapy to help children express what they can’t yet articulate. Around nine to 11, she shifts to role play, a technique that flips the power dynamic entirely.

The method is deceptively simple: let the child become the authority figure. A nine-year-old struggling at school becomes the teacher. A child dealing with bullying becomes the bully. Suddenly, advice they would never accept from an adult pours out of their own mouths.

Her broader philosophy is about balance: children need structure, but they also need agency. Saying “no” without explanation breeds resistance. But offering choice – “Here are the options, here are the outcomes, what do you think is best?” – creates buy-in. They feel in control, which is exactly what they need at that age.

The hidden cost of constant adaptation

Monaco’s international families produce remarkably adaptable children, until they’re not.

Dr Didevar has watched this pattern repeatedly: children who’ve moved countries, switched schools, learned new languages, all without visible complaint. Then one day, something shifts. The child who seemed endlessly flexible suddenly refuses. No more moves. No more fresh starts.

Her own daughter experienced this. After attending schools across continents, she arrived in Monaco and drew a line. “She said, ‘I don’t want to change schools anymore. This is the last move.’ She wanted to stay in one space and be herself.”

For parents navigating Monaco’s transient expat culture, the lesson is clear: just because a child is coping doesn’t mean they’re fine. Adaptability has limits. Watch for the signs – withdrawal, irritability, sudden anxiety – that signal they’ve reached them.

When couples become roommates

With couples, Dr Didevar sees the same pattern: erosion disguised as stability.

“Couples drift away when they don’t talk. It becomes so big they explode, then divorce. Once the curtain of respect is torn, even if you sew it up, the tear still shows.”

She recently worked with a couple divorcing after 21 years. When she asked what they enjoyed doing together, he said jogging – which his wife never wants to do. She named activities he refuses to partake in. After two decades of marriage, they’d never noticed they had nothing in common.

“It’s the mental connection that keeps a couple strong.”

The problem isn’t lack of love, it’s lack of commonality. Couples get bored. They stop doing things together. They become co-managers of a household rather than partners. Her prescription is communication, date nights focused on actual conversation, finding shared interests, and getting help before resentment calcifies into contempt.

Phones at the table

On screen time, Dr Didevar is pro-boundary and realistic about the struggle.

“Parents get fed up and stop controlling it because they have their own distractions and stress. But ultimately, this is your responsibility.”

Her advice isn’t about being stricter, it’s about being consistent. She sets a 30-minutes per day limit for her own daughter. She admits she’s not always perfect at enforcement, but that’s the point. The goal isn’t perfection. It’s showing up repeatedly with the same boundary.

The deeper issue, she suggests, lies in the example set by adults. Children cannot reasonably be asked to disconnect if the grown-ups around them remain constantly absorbed in their own screens. The message is simple but often overlooked: put the phone down and be present. Not only at the dinner table, but in the car, after school, during a walk home — at any moment when a child reaches out to talk. Devices can wait; conversations cannot. Creating screen-free spaces, whether at home or in restaurants, helps restore attention to where it matters most: the relationship between parent and child.

Beyond boundaries, she pushes for uncomfortable conversations about the realities online: predators, deepfakes, coercion, how quickly an innocent interaction becomes threatening. “It’s terrifying because we don’t know how to navigate it. We didn’t grow up with these kinds of threats. But they are absolutely the kinds of conversations we need to be having with our kids.”

The privilege problem

One uncomfortable truth Dr Didevar offers Monaco parents: giving children everything often leaves them with nothing that matters.

“When we give too much, children have nothing to look forward to. They want more and more, and nothing makes them happy.”

The solution isn’t deprivation, it’s teaching value. Get children involved in donation. Educate them about the world beyond their bubble: history, suffering, how children in other countries live. “They need to see the other side. The story isn’t always glamour.”

Make money something earned, not automatically given. “Money doesn’t grow on trees even if you have it. It’s not about punishment, it’s setting them up to succeed in the future.”

Raha’s lived both extremes herself. “People see me and can’t imagine I slept on the ground in Africa – showered in rivers, made food on fire. I’m a chameleon. I can stay in a nice hotel, but I can also sleep on dirt.”

At 14, her daughter will experience the same. She’s taking her to Africa. “Material things – you can’t take them with you. Experiences are what really make the person.”

Open for business

Dr Didevar has worked with clients worldwide online for years, but recently received approval to open her Monaco office – a complicated process requiring clearance from the Department of Economy, Department of Health, and ultimately Prince Albert II himself.

For Monaco residents, this means access to a psychologist who understands international family dynamics, doesn’t waste time, and addresses the real problem families face: children overwhelmed by privilege, couples drifting into emotional silence, teenagers navigating pressures their parents never encountered.

If she had legislative power, she’d mandate two things: therapy for all children aged 12 to 18, and one year of therapy before marriage. “That would solve a lot of problems,” she says convincingly.

If Monaco is where everything is expected to work beautifully, Dr Raha Didevar is making a different promise: Sometimes it doesn’t. And that’s where the work begins.

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Dr. Raha Didevar, Depth and Clinical Psychologist, can be contacted at Drdidevar@bigheartstherapy.com.

 

Monaco startup Sea Further wins prestigious European research grant

A Monaco-based startup has become the first company incubated at MonacoTech to be selected for funding under Horizon Europe, the European Union’s principal research and innovation programme.

Sea Further, founded by Valentino Iakimov and supported by MonacoTech since its early stages, was chosen from several hundred applicants across EU member states for an industrialisation project backed by the European Institute of Innovation and Technology.

The company develops bio-optimised carbon derived from a patented biological process, including graphene modified by marine micro-organisms. The technology improves the performance of hydrogen fuel cells, batteries and energy storage and conversion systems, while significantly reducing dependence on rare earth metals — a growing concern for the clean energy sector globally.

Support for the grant came directly from the Monaco Government, with the Department of Finance and Economy and the Directorate of Economic Development providing personalised support during the application process and contributing to the financing of the research project — two factors the company credits as instrumental to its success.

MonacoTech, which incubates and supports startups across a range of sectors in the Principality, described the selection as a major achievement. For Sea Further, it represents the validation of several years of research and development, and opens the door to scaling a technology with significant implications for the future of clean energy.

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Monaco to go zero waste for the fifth edition of MonaCollecte

MonaCollecte, the Principality’s popular recycling and reuse drive, returns for its fifth edition from 6th to 7th March. 

Organised by the Prince’s Governments and the SociĂ©tĂ© MonĂ©gasque d’Assainissement,  this year’s event centres on the theme of ‘Zero Waste’ and takes place at the Chapiteau de Fontvieille.

MonaCollecte’s purpose is to bring together residents willing to embrace greener habbits through a mix of collections, hands-on workshops and awareness activities.

A workshop for every interest

Visitors can choose from an impressive range of activities across the two days. Aspiring chefs can discover zero-waste cooking through creative recipes designed to cut food waste, while those with a crafty streak can try making their own reusable bread bags, homemade cosmetics, or plant pots from empty containers.

There is also a workshop turning advertising banners into pouches, another creating art from reclaimed cables and computer parts, and one where participants build a small object from scratch using recycled plastic.

For families, a VR workshop offers an immersive experience inside a sorting centre to learn how to recycle correctly, and an outdoor circuit lets younger children sort waste while riding tricycles and scooters. A drawing competition on the zero-waste theme will also take place.

Ocean pollution is also set to take centre stage during the event. In one of the workshops, participants will be able to rescue mârché sea creatures trapped in symbolic waste.

La Mairie’s stand

La Mairie will host two days of activities. On Friday, the Médiathèque Caroline will run a workshop making bookmarks from reclaimed fabric scraps aimed primarily at schoolchildren from 9am, before opening to the wider public until 5pm.

Then, on Saturday, the focus shifts to repair. In partnership with the Repair Café de Nice association, the Mùnegu Repair Café will be on hand from 10am to 6pm to fix everyday portable object brought in by visitors.

Alongside this, the Médiathèque Caroline will display its collection of zero-waste resources, run a second round of the bookmark workshop, and invite people to donate clean, good-condition tote bags to stock its fabric bag lending library.

The event runs from 10am to 7pm on both days with free entry.

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Main photo credit: SociĂ©tĂ© MonĂ©gasque d’Assainissement

Italian fashion brand Twinset to show at Monte-Carlo Fashion Week

Italian womenswear brand Twinset has confirmed it will present a new collection at Monte-Carlo Fashion Week, choosing Monaco as the setting for what the company describes as a new direction for the brand. 

The show is scheduled to take place on the final day of the event, 18th April, in the Grande Verrière space of the Grimaldi Forum.

Twinset will present a Ready-to-Buy selection aimed at the CĂ´te d’Azur market, followed by a final of evening dresses. The brand, which earlier this year showed alongside Vogue CafĂ© during Milan Fashion Week, has been working to raise its international profile under chief executive Gabriele Maggio.

“Twinset possesses a distinctive creative heritage and extraordinary potential,” said Maggio. “We are shaping a solid and visionary development path, aimed at further consolidating the brand’s prestige on the international scene.”

The company was founded in Italy in 1987 and is known for its accessible luxury positioning, with a focus on knitwear and ready-to-wear.

Federica Nardoni Spinetta, President and Founder of the Chambre MonĂ©gasque de la Mode, said the Principality offered designers a credible platform for global exposure. “Monte-Carlo Fashion Week today embodies a spirit of profound renewal,” she said, “confirming its contemporary, dynamic, and global presence.”

About Monte-Carlo Fashion Week

Monte-Carlo Fashion Week has in recent years sought to position itself as a complement to the major fashion capitals, attracting international labels looking for an upscale setting outside the traditional Paris-Milan-London circuit. Every year the event draws buyers and press from across Europe and beyond.

This year’s edition will run from 14th to 18th of April.

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Main photo of Federica Nardoni credit: Gabriele Rigon

Interview: Photographer Franck Solimeis brings Japan to Monaco

Le MĂ©ridien Beach Plaza has opened a unique photography exhibition called ‘Japan Highlights’, by self taught MonĂ©gasque photographer Franck Solimeis. Running until June 15th, it forms part of the hotel’s ongoing cultural programme. 

The show capture’s Japan contradiction, since it combines ancient tradition with relentless modernity. “There are villages where a samurai might appear and you wouldn’t even be surprised,” Solimeis tells Monaco Life. “And then there are cities where robots might serve you. That’s a huge contrast.”

Solimeis’ love affair with Japan was completely accidental. He first visited to see a close friend who had moved there, and found himself completely captivated, not just by the scenery, but by the social fabric. “They make small efforts that have enormous repercussions on their society,” he said. “For example, you don’t see cigarette butts on the ground. When you think about it, it makes complete sense.”

He has since returned three times.

One of his artworks, photo by Monaco Life.

Trains, temples, and long exposures

Among the works on show, his long exposure train photographs stand out. Taken over just a second or two, they capture light trails streaking through the frame — movement frozen in stillness.

“It’s a little experimental. You never quite know what result you’ll get,” he says.

However, the subject choice was deliberate: Japan’s railway culture is as iconic as its temples.

The train photograph, photo by Monaco Life.

In contrast to this modern approach, Solimeis has also photographed temples, capturing the unique silence that surrounds them.

Even on crowded days, visitors, locals and tourists alike move through these spaces with such respect that the calm never shifts or wavers.

The temple photograph, photo by Monaco Life.

The one thing, though, that sets his photographic style apart, is the respect he has when depicting Japan’s culture. It’s a photograph of a geisha, taken from behind, that truly transmits this message.

Uncomfortable with the way tourists typically crowd around geishas for close-up shots, he chose a different approach. “I never saw her face, and she never saw me. It’s a tribute to the beauty of how she’s dressed — the clothes, the make-up, the headdress. And a tribute to women, of course.”

The geisha photograph, photo by Monaco Life.

The exhibition also includes one work by his sister, Carole Micallef, a graphic painting depicting a figure blending Tokyo street style and geisha tradition.

The exhibition was also developed in partnership with Nicolas Dotta of Prime Estate Monaco.

Next stop: New York

For Solimeis, the exhibition is deeply personal. “I sometimes feel a pang of nostalgia here, missing certain places, certain dishes.” His next project, he hopes, will be New York. But Japan came first, and for good reason. “It’s truly my country of the heart.”

‘Japan Highlights’ runs at Le MĂ©ridien Hub until June 15th and with the opening reception taking place 10th March at 6pm.

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Main photo credit: Monaco Life