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Rome City
Italy,Ancien Rome,Rome travel Guide
Rome City
Italy:ROME Travel Guide
The eternal
city of Rome, constructed of ruins and in whose name the Caesars sought to claim
the world, opens for the visitor as a living museum. The centuries peel back
with each new vista in this great city of gladiators, lunatic drivers and
well-rounded pasta posteriors. Vespas, nippy little Fiats and red sports cars
speed past trendy sidewalk bistros and nightclubs, revealing the Rome of
Fellini's La Dolce Vita. The chillingly stark facades of the Stadio
Olimpico complex bring back Mussolini's attempts to reinvent the architecture of
the Caesars.
Rome City
Italy:ROME
Attraction
Rome City
Italy:Capitoline
Hill
Capitoline Hill was the original capitol of the ancient city and
continues to serve as the seat of the city's government. The main feature of the
area is Michelangelo's Piazza del Campidoglio, a testimony to the superiority of
Renaissance town planning. The piazza is bordered by three palaces: the Palazzo
dei Conservatori and the twin structures of the Palazzo dei Senatori and Palazzo
Nuovo which house the Musei Capitolini, containing the largest collection of
classical statues in the world. Among the notable statues found here are the
Dying Gaul and the Satyr, the Capitoline Wolf with Romulus and Remus and the
Spinario. Paths cut along the side of the hill from the Campidoglio giving way
to panoramic views of the ancient sites of the Forum and Colosseum
Rome City
Italy:Roman Forum
(Foro Romano)
The site of ancient Rome's commercial, political and
religious centre retires in the valley between the Capitoline and Palatine
hills. The Forum's main thoroughfare, Via Sacra, slices through the old market
square and former civic centre. To make sense of the ruins and relics of the old
Republic it is helpful to consult a map of the area. Some of the best preserved
and most notable monuments include the impressive Arch of Septimus Severus
- a construction designed to celebrate Roman victory over the Parthinians
- and the former atrium of the House of the Vestal Virgins and Temple of Vesta.
Also of note are the Temple of Antoninus and Faustina, and the Arch of Titus,
built to celebrate Titus' destruction of Jerusalem in AD70. To the right of the
arch are stairs snaking up the Palatine hill through a series of terraces to the
Farnese gardens. The scented avenue festooned with roses and orange trees gives
way to a vista over the Forum.
Rome City
Italy:The
Colosseum
This enduring symbol of ancient Rome tenaciously clings to its
foundations as the site of former gladiatorial conquests. Its architecture
boasts an impressive array of Doric, Ionic and Corinthian columns and an
underground network of cells, corridors, ramps and elevators that were used to
transport animals from their cages to the arena. The magnificence of the
original structure has been eroded through the years of pillaging and
earthquakes so that only a skeletal framework remains.
Rome City
Italy:Pantheon
The stately Pantheon is one of the world's most
inspiring architectural designs. Fittingly built as a temple to the Gods by
Hadrian in 120AD, its perfectly proportioned floating dome rests seductively on
sturdy marble columns. The only light source flowing through the central oculus
was used by the Romans to measure time (with the aid of a sundial) and the dates
of equinoxes and solstices. The south transept houses the Carafa Chapel and the
tomb of Fra Angelico rests under the left side of the altar.
Rome City
Italy:The Spanish
Steps and Piazza di Spagna
The graceful steps built in 1725, elegantly
curve their way from the Piazza di Spagna to the Church of Santa Trinit dei
Monti, a pastel tinted neoclassical building. The shopper's paradise of Via
Condotti leads back from the Spanish steps to Via del Corso, and during spring
the steps are decorated with pink azaleas. At the foot of the steps lies
Bernini's boat-shaped Barcaccia fountain and to the right is the unassuming
Keats-Shelley Memorial House.
Rome City
Italy:Trevi
Fountain (Fontana di Trevi)
The tiny Piazza di Trevi has been
immortalised through this fountain built for Pope Clement XII. The statues
adorning this watery display represent Abundance, Agrippa, Salubrity, the Virgin
and Neptune guided by two tritons. Tossing a coin into the fountain is supposed
to guarantee a return trip to Rome.
Rome City
Italy:St Peter’s
Basilica (Basilica di San Pietro)
The Basilica lies above the reputed
site of St. Peter's tomb. It is an overwhelming interior containing notable
sculptures including Michelangelo's Pieta, which is protected by bullet-proof
glass since the damaging attack on it in 1972. In the central aisle stands
Arnolfo da Cambio's bronze statue of St Peter, its foot worn down by the
constant flow of pilgrims' kisses. Proudly resting above the papal altar is
Bernini's Throne of St Peter. The Vatican Grottoes, containing papal tombs, can
be reached by steps from the statue of St Longinus. The Necropolis is located
one level below the grottoes. This is the legendary site of St Peter's tomb and
advance permission has to be obtained to view it. A strict dress code is in
place for the Basilica and no shorts, bare shoulders or miniskirts are allowed
(for men and women).
Rome City
Italy:The Sistine
Chapel & Vatican Museums
The Sistine Chapel's famous ceiling painted
by Michelangelo looms above the frescoes on the side walls that were painted by
an illustrious team of artists that included Botticelli, Ghirlandaio, Roselli,
Pinturicchio, Signorelli and della Gatta. The altar wall is covered by
Michelangelo's Last Supper, revealing the figure of Christ hovering above centre
and flanked by Mary and other saintly figures. The Vatican Museums provide an
inspiring visit to one of the world's greatest collections of art. The galleries
stretch over four miles (6km) and include the magnificent Raphael rooms, the
Etruscan Museum and the Pio-Clementino Museum, which boasts the world's largest
collection of Classical statues.
For a taste of
the Baroque, visitors need only climb the famous Spanish Steps, walk through the
Piazza Navona or toss a coin into the beautiful Trevi Fountain. Renaissance
splendour is perhaps best revealed in the Pope's residence, the Vatican Palace,
or in Michelangelo's efforts on the roof of the Sistine Chapel. From early
Christian Basilicas to the Roman Forum, the Colosseum and the Pantheon, the
sequence of history trails back to the height of the Roman Empire.
It may
sound like a city of contrasts, but Rome's timeless magic lies in its ability to
blend the old with the new. Empires have risen and fallen, old gods have been
replaced with new ones, but Rome remains.