home
SITE MAPCONTACT USUSEFUL LINKSSELF GUIDED EXCURSIONS
SITE MAP

Accomodation search:

LUXURY
Villas and apartments
throughout Italy
TUSCANY
Villas with pool,
apartments in
farmhouses with
pool and apartments
downtown

Siena
Arezzo
Lucca
Florence
Tuscan Coast
UMBRIA
ROME & LAZIO
Apartments
in Rome's hystorical centre and Villas in the Roman Countryside

Rome DownTown
Rome Surroundings
Rome North
Rome South
VENICE & VENETO
Apartments
in Venice and villas in the countryside
LIGURIA
APULIA (PUGLIA)
RIMINI AND MARCHE
NAPLES
AMALFI
SORRENTO
SICILY
SARDINIA
AOSTA VALLEY
LOMBARDY/PIEDMONT
ABRUZZO
    EXCURSIONS/ITALY/LAZIO/ ROME english

Walking in

Rome and Vatican City


Monuments, museums, Vatican city
Middle and high class holidays' villas, apartments and farmhouses in Rome

Rome is studded with ancient monuments that silently evoke its history as the greatest center of Western civilization. It became one of the first cosmopolitan cities in the world, importing slaves, gladiators, great art - even citizens - from the far corners of the Empire because all roads led to Rome at that time already and today too, with good reason.
With all its carnage and mismanagement, it left a legacy of law and uncanny lesson in how to conquer enemies by absorbing their culture.
But ancient Rome is only part of the spectacle. The Vatican has had a major effect in making the city a center of world tourism. Although Vatican architects stripped down much of the glory of the past, they created great Renaissance treasures, occasionally incorporating the old, just as Michelangelo did in turning the Baths of Diocletian into a church.
In the years that followed, Bernini adorned the city with the wonders of the baroque, especially the fountains. The modern sightseer even owes a debt (as reluctant as one may be to acknowledge it) to Mussolini, who did much to dig out the past, particularly at the Imperial Forum. Today, besides being the Italian capital, Rome, in a larger sense, belongs to the world.

Especially For Kids
Rome has lots of other amusements for children when they tire of ancient monuments, although they are usually fond of wandering around the Colisseum and the Roman Forum. Many children also enjoy the climb to the top of St. Peter's.
The Fun Fair (Luna Park), along via delle Tre Fontane (592-5933), at E.U. R., is one of the largest in Europe. It is known for its "big wheel" at the entrance, and there are also merry-go-rounds, miniature railways, shooting galleries, and other attractions. Admission is free but you pay for each ride. It is closed on Tuesdays.
Teatro delle Marionette degli Accettella, performing at the Theatro Mongiovino, via Giovanni Genocchi 16 (513-9405), has performances for children on Saturday and Sunday (except in August), at 4:30 p.m. Both adults and children pay for tickets.
The Puppet Theater on Pincio Square in the Villa Borghese gardens has "Punch and Judy" performances nearly every day. While there, you may also like to take your children through the park (It is closed to traffic). Children enjoy the fountain displays and the lake and there are many wide spaces in which they can play. Boats can be hired at the Giardino del Lago. A trip to the zoo in Rome is also possible, as it lies in the Villa Borghese, at viale del Giardino Zoologico 10 (321-65-64). It is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. There is an admission fee for adults but children are free.
Take bus no. 19 or 30. At 4:00 p.m., you can take your child to the Quirinale Palace, piazza del Quirinale, the residence of the president of Italy. There is a military band and a parade at that time as the guards change shifts.

Special Interest Sightseeing for the Literary Enthusiast
Keats-Shelley Memorial: Piazza di Spagna 26. Tele 678-4235. Admission fee. June - September Monday thru Friday 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. and 3:00 to 6:00 p.m.; October through May, Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. and 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. Metro: Piazza di Spagna. At the foot of the Spanish Steps is this 18th century house where Keats died of consumption on February 23, 1821. "It is like living in a violin," wrote Italian author Alberto Savinio. The apartment where Keats spent his last summer months, carefully tended by his close friend Joseph Severn, shelters a museum and research library, with a strange death mask of Keats as well as the "deadly sweat" drawing by Severn and many other mementos of Keats, Shelley and Byron. For those interested in the full story of the involvement of Keats and Shelley in Italy, books are sold on the premises.

Protestant Cemetery:
Via Caio Cestia 6. Tele. 574-1900. Admission is free but an offering is customary given. April 1 through September 30th, 9 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. ; October 1 through March 31st, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Closed Mondays. Metro: St. Pauls. Bus: 13, 27 or 30. Near St. Paul's Station, in the midst of a setting of cypress trees, lies the old cemetery where John Keats was buried. In a grave nearby, Joseph Severn, his "deathbed" companion, was interred beside him six decades later. Dejected, and feeling his reputation as a poet diminished by the rising vehemence of his critics, Keats asked that the following epitaph be written on his tombstone: "Here lies one whose name was writ in water." A great romantic poet Keats certainly was, but a prophet, thankfully not. Shelley, author of Prometheus Unbound, drowned off the Italian Riviera in 1822, before his 30th birthday. His ashes rest alongside those of Edward John Trelawny, fellow romantic and man of the sea. Trelawny maintained (but this was not proved) that Shelley may have been murdered, perhaps by petty pirates bent on robbery. While you are here, you may want to drop in at the neighboring Pyramid of Caius Cestius.

Depending upon your destination in Rome, take the subway. This is the fastest means of transportation in Rome. It has two underground lines: Line A goes from Ottaviano, near St. Peter's to Anagnina, stopping at piazza Flaminio (near piazza del Popolo), piazza Vittorio Emanuele, and piazza San Giovanni in Laterano. Line B connects the Rebibbia district with via Laurentina, stopping at via Cavour, piazza Bologna, Stazione Termini, the Coliseum, Circus Maximus, the Pryamid of C. Cestius, St. Paul's Outside the Walls, the Magliana, and the E.U.R.A. big red letter M indicates the entrance to the subway.


Vatican City
The Country of the Popes
St Peter's Basilic
The vatican Museum
The Sistine Chapel

Rome downtown
Walking Tour


from Colosseum
to
Circus Maximus
Time: Two hours
Best Time: Any sunny day
Worst Time: Morning or early-evening rush hours

Rome downtown
Walking Tour


from The Spanish Steps to
Villa Borghese
Time: the whole morning
Best Time: Any sunny day
Worst Time: villa Borghese is to be visited during light hours

Rome downtown
Monuments and Museums.
Addresses, tel., time table, bus and Metro.


Tivoli
Villa Adriana
The villa of Emperor Hadrian
carfrom Rome: 30'', 30 Km
public transport 40''


Tivoli
Villa d'Este
the 1500 fountains villa
frocarm Rome: 30'',30Km

public transport 40''


Bracciano
&
Martignano
Lakes
carfrom Rome: 30'',25Km M 30''
Rome Downtown ACCOMMODATIONS >>>



Bargain:
• LAST MINUTE
SPECIAL OFFERS TODAY. Book your discounted or last minute villa or apartment in Italy

Transport:
• AIRPORT LIMOUSINE
• CAR RENTALS
• TRAVEL INSURANCE
• ITALIAN AIRPORTS

How much does it cost?
• CURRENCY CONVERTER

Weather:
• CLIMATE
Click here to find your destination's monthly average Temperatures
and precipitations
• METEOSAT

When in Italy:
• UNESCO ITALIAN SITES
the Italian sites listed in the UNESCO World Heritage List
• YOUR INTERNET CAFE
addresses
• FOREIGN EMBASSIES
addresses and phones

Owners:
• LIST YOUR PROPERTY

Testimonials:
VISITOR SUGGESTIONS
To improuve our site please let us know your comments and suggestions
CLIENTS TESTIMONIALS
This is what our Guests think of us...

Free download
IWR WALL CALENDAR
Download and print our New Year wall calendar
• YOUR PICTURES
Send us a pictures from your Italian holiday and we will publish it
SITE MAPCONTACT USUSEFUL LINKSSELF GUIDED EXCURSIONS