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Insight Guides City Guide Rome (Travel Guide eBook)
Insight Guides City Guide Rome (Travel Guide eBook)
Insight Guides City Guide Rome (Travel Guide eBook)
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Insight Guides City Guide Rome (Travel Guide eBook)

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Newly updated edition of Insight Guides City Guide Rome is ideal for travellers seeking immersive cultural experiences, In-depth on history and culture: enjoy special features on Roman fashion and Mussolini's Legacy, all written by local experts.



Innovative extras = incredible value, and unique in the market. All City Guides come with a free eBook and regularly updated app, unlike comparable competitors' products. High-production values - compact cut-down format and full-colour throughout. Exciting opportunities for bespoke promotions - please contact your Account Manager for details



Content overview: -in-depth on history and culture -invaluable maps, travel tips and practical information ensure effortless planning -inspirational colour photography throughout -inventive design makes for an engaging reading experience.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 1, 2018
ISBN9781789192148
Insight Guides City Guide Rome (Travel Guide eBook)
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Insight Guides

Insight Guides wherever possible uses local experts who provide insider know-how and share their love and knowledge of the destination.

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    Insight Guides City Guide Rome (Travel Guide eBook) - Insight Guides

    Atlas

    Rome’s Top 10 Attractions

    Here, at a glance, are the city’s must-sees, from the iconic monuments of Ancient Rome to the vibrant squares of Campo de’ Fiori and Trastevere, and the tranquil gardens of the Villa Borghese.

    Top Attraction 1

    The Forum. The majestic ruins of the the civic centre of Ancient Rome are best seen on a Sunday when the busy thoroughfare that cuts through the site is closed to traffic. For more information, click here.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Top Attraction 2

    Vatican Museums. These merit a lifetime’s study, but if you only have a few hours, be sure to include the Sistine Chapel in your tour of this vast repository of art. Michelangelo’s breathtaking ceiling is a triumph of fresco painting. For more information, click here.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Top Attraction 3

    Colosseum. A shadow of its marble-clad imperial days, but impressive nonetheless and, as a symbol of Rome, it remains one of the city’s key sights. For more information, click here.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Top Attraction 4

    Capitoline Museums. For a real insight into life in Ancient Rome, follow a tour of the Forum with a visit to this imposing collection of ancient art and Roman statuary. Among its most famous exhibits is the original bronze statue of a she-wolf suckling Romulus and Remus. For more information, click here.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Top Attraction 5

    Spanish Steps. All human life converges here, at the heart of Rome’s main shopping district. For more information, click here.

    Susan Smart/Apa Publications

    Top Attraction 6

    Trastevere. This old working-class district, across the Tiber from the centre, is now a trendy quarter full of boutiques, restaurants and wine bars. For more information, click here.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Top Attraction 7

    Pantheon. The best-preserved of all Ancient Rome’s buildings is Emperor Hadrian’s perfectly proportioned temple. For more information, click here.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Top Attraction 8

    Trevi Fountain. When a voluptuous Anita Ekberg frolicked in here in Fellini’s La Dolce Vita, she turned it into a Roman icon. Throw a coin with your right hand over the left shoulder in the water and enjoy an ice cream on the steps. For more information, click here.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Top Attraction 9

    Piazza Navona. Della Porta’s masterpiece, the Fountain of Neptune, stands at the northern end of this elegant, enclosed square full of buskers, street performers, street artists and tourists. For more information, click here.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Top Attraction 10

    Villa Borghese. This leafy spot is perfect for picnicking and home to two world-class museums. For more information, click here.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Editor’s Choice

    Unique attractions, festivals and events, top shops, pizzas and piazzas, church art, family outings ... here are our recommendations, plus some money-saving tips.

    Rome is for romantics.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Best churches for art

    San Luigi dei Francesi. The dramatic paintings by Caravaggio in the Contarelli Chapel were the artist’s first great religious works. For more information, click here.

    Santa Maria in Trastevere. A pretty medieval church with spectacular mosaics on the facade and in the apse. For more information, click here.

    Basilica di San Pietro. Michelangelo’s tender and moving Pietà in St Peter’s was completed when the artist was only 25 and remains one of his most famous works. For more information, click here.

    San Pietro in Vincoli. This church houses another Michelangelo masterpiece, the restored statue of Moses. For more information, click here.

    Santa Maria della Vittoria. So sensual is Bernini’s famous sculpture of the Ecstasy of St Teresa that many suggest the rapture on her face is more than an expression of piety. For more information, click here.

    Santa Prassede. The 9th-century church is filled with magnificent Byzantine mosaics. For more information, click here.

    Santa Maria del Popolo. A treasure house of art, with paintings by Raphael and Pinturicchio, plus two impassioned Caravaggios. For more information, click here.

    Michelangelo’s Pietà.

    Dreamstime

    Best views

    The Gianicolo hill. Worlds away from the tightly packed streets of Trastevere and the chaos of the city below. For more information, click here.

    Piazza Venezia. Fine views from the Vittoriano monument with the added advantage of excluding the hulking monument itself. For more information, click here.

    Caffè Capitolino. Romantic views of terracotta rooftops and countless cupolas from the Capitoline Museum’s pretty café. For more information, click here.

    The Tabularium. Take in the Forum and the Palatine from a terrace in the ancient archive of Roman Law. For more information, click here.

    Pincio Gardens. Views from the Villa Borghese Gardens stretch from Monte Mario to the Gianicolo and the piazza below. For more information, click here.

    Hadrian’s Villa.

    Britta Jaschinski/Apa Publications

    Best getaways

    Ostia Antica. Well-preserved ruins of an old Roman port town. For more information, click here.

    Tivoli. See the sumptuous Villa d’Este and its fountain-filled garden, and the remains of Hadrian’s magnificent villa. For more information, click here.

    Etruscan tombs. Cerveteri is the most atmospheric of the many Etruscan necropolises outside Rome. For more information, click here.

    Oasi di Ninfa. An enchanting English-style garden with medieval ruins. For more information, click here.

    Beaches. Head for Ostia or Fregene, or to Lazio’s southern coastal stretches. For more information, click here.

    Castelli Romani. The hills south of Rome are a relaxing destination for a picnic and great wine. For more information, click here.

    Nuns on Piazza San Pietro.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Best piazzas

    Piazza Navona. Baroque grandeur, spectacular fountains and lively atmosphere. For more information, click here.

    Piazza Farnese. A welcome relief from the chaos of neighbouring Campo de’ Fiori. For more information, click here.

    Piazza Mattei. A small piazza with a playful fountain and trendy café. For more information, click here.

    Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere. This neighbourly square buzzes with activity round the clock but never seems crowded. For more information, click here.

    Piazza San Pietro. Vast, colonnaded square designed by Bernini to accommodate those on the papal pilgrimage. For more information, click here.

    Piazza del Campidoglio. For the beautifully elegant staircase designed by Michelangelo. For more information, click here.

    Piazza di Spagna. A spectacular urban space, perfect for people-watching. For more information, click here.

    Children of all ages will enjoy Castel Sant-Angelo.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Rome for families

    Villa Borghese Gardens. Laid out over rolling hills, this is the perfect city park for picnicking and relaxing. Attractions include museums, a zoo, a kids’ playhouse, a boating lake and bikes for hire. For more information, click here.

    Castel Sant’Angelo. Drawbridges, trapdoors, cannons, ditches and dungeons … everything but dragons in this ancient castle. For more information, click here.

    Children’s Museum. Explora is a delightful playtown where kids can touch, draw and play to their heart’s content. For more information, click here.

    Puppet shows. Free Punch and Judy shows on the Gianicolo hill. For more information, click here.

    Coins in the fountain. A coin tossed in the Trevi Fountain is said to guarantee your return to Rome. For more information, click here.

    Villa Torlonia park. Let your older kids (11–15) interact with technology or simulate the set of a TV programme at Technotown, then relax in the fairytale setting of the Casina delle Civette. For more information, click here.

    Fashion by Valentino.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Best buys

    Ice cream. Head to Grom for colouring- and preservative-free ice cream made with organic ingredients.

    Valentino. Ready-to-wear from Rome’s beloved designer. For more information, click here.

    Shoes. From Fratelli Rossetti, a classic Italian footwear maker.

    Food. Two legendary delis for Roman specialities are Volpetti in Testaccio and well-stocked Castroni in Prati.

    Jewellery. In New York there’s Tiffany, in Paris there’s Cartier, and in Rome there’s Bulgari, where extravagant jewellery reigns supreme.

    Legendary Volpetti deli.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Two of the many cats roaming the streets of Rome.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Only in Rome

    Cat colonies. There are thousands of cats in Rome, many of them living wild among the ancient ruins. For more information, click here.

    Priestly couture. Papal party gear, nuns’ underwear, incense burners and more can be found in shops for religious garments and accessories on Via dei Cestari and Via di Santa Chiara. For more information, click here.

    Cappuccino. Rome is full of atmospheric cafés serving excellent coffee. Piazza Rotonda and Piazza Farnese are prime spots, but the neighbourhood cafés frequented by locals are more fairly priced.

    Catacombs. Three of the largest underground burial sites are to be found in the vicinity of the Appian Way. For more information, click here.

    Made by monks. The potions and lotions, teas and preserves on sale at Ai Monasteri are all made by monks. For more information, click here.

    Best festivals and events

    RomaEuropa. An experimental arts festival held every autumn.

    Estate Romana. Roman Summer is the collective name for all the events held outdoors in parks, villas, monuments and ancient sites, from June to September.

    Easter week. Torchlit processions and a huge open-air Mass in St Peter’s Square. Plus chocolate and pastries galore.

    Rome Film Fest. Rome’s official film festival. Held at the Auditorium in October.

    Il Natale di Roma. On 21 April Rome celebrates its founding with fireworks, music and other events.

    Opera at Terme di Caracalla. Every summer, Rome’s opera theatre moves outdoors for magnificent performances amid the ruins.

    Pizzas may have originated in Naples, but there are many excellent ones to be found all over Rome.

    Susan Smart/Apa Publications

    Best pizzas

    Dar Poeta. A special yeast-free dough is this Trastevere pizzeria’s trademark. A local favourite.

    Formula Uno. The best and most down-to-earth pizzeria in the San Lorenzo university quarter, which is known as pizza central.

    Da Baffetto. A legendary pizza venue with fast-moving queues outside all night long. Brash but efficient service adds to the quintessential Roman experience.

    Napul’è. More than 40 types of authentic Neapolitan pizza.

    O’ Pazzariello. A Neapolitan pizzeria with lots of ambience in a fairly small space.

    PizzaRé. Serves a huge range of crusty Neapolitan-style pizzas that are reliable and appetising.

    Ai Marmi. Thin-crusted pizza baked to perfection in the heart of Trastevere.

    For more about Roman pizza click here.

    Aperitivo time on Via della Pace.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    The Trevi Fountain lit up at night.

    Alamy

    Luxury shops can be found along the Via Condotti.

    Alamy

    Introduction: The Eternal City

    Romantic, artistic, and rich with legends from yesterday and today – not only is Rome a feast for the eyes, it’s also a living museum, breathing human history at every turn.

    Few cities in the world manage to combine the eras as gracefully as Rome does. The glorious jumble of history and art we see today has been an ongoing construction site for more than 2,700 years. Layer upon layer, the Romans have built and rebuilt their city infinite times, always using the past as a foundation for the future.

    A stroll in the streets of this truly eternal city is both a history lesson and a journey for the senses. The warm colours of the roofs and buildings blend perfectly with the Italian sunset, the scent of good food is a backdrop for the city’s lively, loud soundtrack, and the diverse views offer the whole repertoire of western architecture, from the ancient columns of the Republic to the curved facades of the Baroque period, from the neoclassical perfection of the 1700s to the futuristic museums of today.

    Colosseum inscription.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Rome changes slowly, but the 21st century has brought a waft of fresh air to the world’s most ancient city, giving a much-needed facelift to many of the city’s ancient sites and bringing changes in the dormant artistic and architectural scenes. Revamped galleries, new contemporary art spaces, a cinema festival and the creation of a superb music complex turned Rome into a modern city that stays true to its glorious past while facing the future with confidence. The revival of once forgotten neighbourhoods, such as Flaminio and EUR, further amplified the tourist offer, with major works of public architecture such as the Music Bridge that connects Flaminio with the Foro Italico, the Fuksas’ cloud building, and the EUR’s Aquarium of the Mediterranean, a see-through structure built under the water of an artificial lake.

    The iconic Fiat 500.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    While not a new Dolce Vita, there is a cinematic gloss to the emerging city, with eclectic festivals, a funky club scene, sleek cafés, boutique hotels and a more cosmopolitan air. Rome is an immense outdoor museum, but a simple walk in the centre can be enough to take in the atmosphere and understand the magic of one of the world’s most enchanted cities.

    A flush of colour.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Rome and the Romans

    Dubbed the Eternal City by poets and artists, Rome inspires the mind, appeals to the senses and captures the heart. With its combination of new and old and of peace and chaos, it is a city of charming contrasts.

    Chaotic but compact, bewildering but walkable, beguiling but exhausting, the Eternal City sparks mixed feelings in both locals and visitors. Everybody ends up loving Rome, but one thing is certain: traffic is one of the city’s distinctive features just as much as the Colosseum, and it is possibly the first thing any visitor will notice when stepping out of Termini Station. The public transport system, from the pointless metro to the overcrowded buses, is woefully inadequate with two metro lines going nowhere relevant for most visitors. The new metro line, running northwest to southeast, is not due for completion until 2020 at the earliest. Fear of damaging ancient sites and becoming mired in bureaucracy are why radical measures have never been contemplated before.

    The Eternal City has shaken off its dusty toga and slipped into contemporary clothes. As the mayor says: Rome dares to dream again.

    For now, cynical Romans see a decent transport system as a gift to their grandchildren, much as straight roads were a gift to the Empire’s grateful colonies. Until then, the locals will continue to fume in traffic jams, flit by on flimsy Vespas or rattle around in speed-crazed buses. For visitors, the good news is that, with stoicism, sturdy shoes and enough caffeine-fuelled café stops, Rome is still a heavenly walking city.

    Piazza di Spagna at dusk.

    Susan Smart/Apa Publications

    Neighbourhoods

    The locals jest that Rome is not for Romans: few Romans live in the historic centre any more. In the 1960s the tradesmen moved to the suburbs in search of comfortable apartments while the centro storico succumbed to gentrification; once-crumbling palazzi were snapped up by astute investors, from bankers to politicians. Yet individuals remain attached to their rione or neighbourhood: the original 14 date from the time of the Emperor Augustus, but have grown to 22, each with its own civic crest.

    Outsiders often see Rome as devoted to Imperial posturing, whether of the ostentatious Colosseum-Forum variety or Mussolini’s self-aggrandising EUR district. Yet local neighbourhoods can be both cosmopolitan and homely, ranging from the formalised domesticity of Parioli, framed by embassies, to mellow Trastevere, louche yet intimate. Looming above Trastevere is the leafy, fin de siècle Gianicolo district, home to many expatriate newcomers.

    All aboard

    For the cheapest, most chaotic tour through the time machine that is Rome, hop on the 87 bus, which runs from east to west, scoring a cross-section of the city’s history. The route runs from bustling Piazza Cavour to the rural Via Appia Antica archaeological park. En route are swathes of the Imperial, Early Christian, Renaissance and Baroque city in all its glory, from the gladiatorial Colosseum to seductive Piazza Navona, the Tiber and the legendary Seven Hills of Rome. Flashing past your eyes is all Roman history, from monumentality to murder most foul.

    To see Rome as Fellini saw it, ride the No. 3 tram, which Fellini claimed gave him inspiration.

    Rome can be rough around the edges, but its lack of manicured perfection is part of its charm. The Esquilino area, around the Fascist-Modernist Termini Station, nicknamed the dinosaur, is a case in point, as is Testaccio, the former meat-packing district that is, with Ostiense, the pulsating heart of clubland. Once dilapidated, these districts are being gentrified but retain their edginess, youthful spirit and multiethnic flavour. Rome is more cosmopolitan than at any time since the Empire, though hardly on the same scale.

    Yet beyond its bustle and bravado, the Eternal City feels static, imprisoned by its past. Rome is the place for contemplating the passage of time and the vanity of human wishes. Within a short time you forget everything; and everything forgets you, said Marcus Aurelius. The world-weary population has little inclination to relive the glory, decline and fall. Nonetheless, there is a residual melancholy and romantic nostalgia for both the grandeur of Imperial Rome and for the cultural and artistic creativity witnessed in the Renaissance, the two moments in history that still make the Romans extremely proud – without, however, having inspired any major creative revivals so far.

    Comforting words on Piazza del Popolo.

    Britta Jaschinski/Apa Publications

    The temporal and the spiritual

    Novelist Alberto Moravia used to say: Rome is an administrative city dominated by two institutions: the State and the Church. While an oversimplification, Rome is the meeting place of temporal and spiritual powers and, as the capital, lives and breathes politics. As for piety, the Vatican has traditionally been treated as a temporal power, as the corporate arm of the papacy. Faith is made here but believed elsewhere, is the local dictum.

    Shopping on the Campo de’ Fiori.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Essentially, the Romans are more ritualistic than religious, even if the death of John Paul II saw an outpouring of emotion that surprised cynical Rome-watchers.

    At work, Romans have an inbuilt resistance to Milanese efficiency, schedules and short lunch breaks. Life is too Latin for a Protestant work ethic. Indeed, there are few qualms about playing the tourist at home, from eating an ice cream on Piazza Navona to tossing a coin in the Trevi Fountain, visiting the Vatican museums on a Vespa, lolling around the Villa Borghese Gardens, or peeking into the Pantheon while on a café crawl.

    As the writer Alberto Moravia said: There are no Romans, only people from all parts of Italy who adopt Roman characteristics.

    As the local saying goes: "ce piace mangia bene ce piace poco lavoràwe prefer eating and drinking to working" – in theory, that is. In reality, however, lots of modern-day Romans would do anything to be able to work. The 2012 crisis produced unprecedented rates of unemployment as thousands of companies shut down, and a posto fisso, a permanent job, has become the number one dream of thousands of young Italians.

    Church attendance is waning; only a quarter of Italians attend Mass regularly.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Some pizzas are worth queuing for.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Italy is a family-based society, but most young Romans are cosmopolitan enough to at least wish they could contradict the mammoni stereotype, which generally describes Italians as unwilling to leave their mamma’s home until they get married. Shortage of jobs and the extremely high rents, however, make it impossible for most Romans to leave their nest, and many just can’t afford to say bye to mum until they are in their 40s, or even 50s.

    Roman caffè society.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Party-goers start late and finish late.

    Britta Jaschinski/Apa Publications

    Romans at play

    Bar aficionados believe you can tell a lot about a Roman by his café of choice. Cardinals favour the upstanding Caffè San Pietro near the Vatican, while haunts such as Caffè Rosati on Piazza del Popolo are proud of being the place not to be seen – here, celebrity regulars unwind in a discreet Art Nouveau ambience.

    Roman café owners proudly announce that this was Fellini’s favourite place, Mastroianni’s haunt, or that Bertolucci prefers our pastries. Bar Canova, near Piazza del Popolo, was Fellini’s second home: he came straight from his Oscar success to a party in the bar. The back room, where the visionary director held meetings, is now a Fellini shrine.

    Carabinieri on duty.

    Ming Tang-Evans/Apa Publications

    Yet the best bars compel a sentimental attachment that goes well beyond celebrity­worship: the journalist wife of former mayor Francesco Rutelli even dedicated a book to her local bar-owner in Caffè del Teatro Marcello.

    Nightlife is less tribal than café culture, inspired by "vivere e lascia vivere, a live and let live" philosophy. Party-goers start late and finish late, with clubbers calling into a bar for a cornetto (sweet croissant) and cappuccino before heading home. San Lorenzo, a city within a city, is an erstwhile immigrant district that is now the heart of the main university quarter, around Via dei Volsci. By night, books are exchanged for bar crawls, with Happy Hour an excuse for wine-tasting, tapas bars, emerging bands and, bizarrely, even board games.

    Clubland is centred on Testaccio and Via Ostiense, particularly since the Roma Tre university campus has revitalised the area, while the Ponte Milvio (Flaminio) neighbourhood houses a number of clubs and bars conceived to entertain a see-and-be-seen crowd, and often frequented by local starlets. More mellow visitors may feel more at home with Trastevere’s arty ambience, and an evening spent in cool bars, listening to the Blues, followed by an affogato ice cream, drenched in

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