I'm also going to recommend glass. Silver gelatin prints aren't the most durable medium out there. They hold up fine to careful handling, but if something got on the print and you needed to clean it, that could pose some issues.
Along with preventing damage to the print's surface, glass will also protect the print from UV damage ass well. With some exceptions, all glass will block some amount of UV. Your local framing shop will typically have some options for additional UV protection and anti-reflective glass. I personally like spending the extra money on the anti-reflective "museum" glass for my prints, but that is an expensive option, especially once you have larger prints/frames.
General recommendation: glass it worth it. If you have the funds, anti-reflective UV glass is fantastic.
Now for a more nuanced answer!
Most commercially available darkroom paper contains OBAs (optical brightening agents) in the baryta layer (below the gelatin). This help produce a bright white base and gives the print more brightness, whiteness, and contrast. OBAs work by absorbing UV light and reflecting back visible light hence the "brightening" aspect. You can tell OBA and OBA free paper apart by shining a UV light on it. OBA paper will glow and OBA free paper will be dull.
OBAs break down over a long time with UV exposure. It is part of why old paper turns yellow or grayer. This is part of what you are preventing when using UV blocking glass. But the flip side of that is your prints will loose some of that extra brightness and whiteness when displayed behind UV glass. Do I personally notice this difference on the wall? No. But you can see it somewhat if you put an uncovered print next to one behind UV glass.
UV blocking glass may render the benefits of certain papers null, specifically in the case of Ilford cooltone paper. That paper appears to be loaded with extra OBAs giving it a much brighter a slighter cooler appearance in the whites/highlights. Behind UV glass, it looses that advantage (in my opinion!).
Counterpoint is that much of this is moot unless you are displaying your prints under florecent lights or sunlight.
Side note: I also remember Fomatone MG Classic not glowing under UV when testing some of this, so I believe it is OBA free if memery serves correct.
Another side note: I find it interesting that darkroom papers typically contain OBAs, but so much of the literature on darkroom printing/processing is focused on archival permanence. Whereas high end art papers and printer papers will be very prominently advertised as OBA free for archival purposes/delivering consistent performance over time. There are some research papers and resources out there on OBA degridation. I'm honestly not sure concerned one should be about OBAs in darkroom paper.