Visitar en Roma

Visitare Roma

Trevi Fountain

Fontana di Trevi

The most spectacular of Rome’s fountains, immortalised by Anita Ekberg ‘s midnight dip in Fellini’s classic film “La dolce vita” (The Sweet Life). The fountain was designed to show off the acqueduct of the Acqua Vergine built by Marco Vipsiano Agrippa in 19 b.C. to supply water to the thermal baths which he built close to the Pantheon. The water was named Vergin after the legend telling of a young girl who showed the original spring to a group of thirsty Roman soldiers. The first fountain to take the waters of the Acqua Vergine was built in 1453 for pope Nicholas V, designed by Giovan Battista Alberti in the spot called “of the Trejo” and through the years it took the name of Trevi.

Spanish Steps

Piazza di Spagna

The square is one of the characteristic spots of the city and offers a splendid panorama on the center of Rome. Dominated by the façade of the church of the Trinità dei Monti, built in 1502 and consecrated in 1587 by Sisto V, that made of it a focal point of his ambitious urbanistic plan. From here began the Via Felice, then Sistina, straight road that led pilgrims to the basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore.

Panteón (Panteón de Agripa), Roma

Pantheon

El Panteón de Agripa, también conocido como Panteón de Roma, es el monumento de época romana mejor conservado de Roma. El significado de Panteón es “Templo de los dioses”, así que como su nombre indica está dedicado a todos los dioses.

Navona Square

Piazza Navona

Rome’s most characteristic square; The whole district, with its narrow streets, dark lanes and its closed palaces, witnesses of a glorious past and of traditions full of charm to us. The history of the square goes back to Ancient Rome. In this area rose the large Circus of the Emperor Domitian. As a matter of fact the vast elliptical shape of the square matches exactly the outlines of the circus. Here were carried out mock sea battles, grandiose public shows, games etc. In the following centuries, although the complex fell into ruins, the site was still a favourite spot by the Romans.

Church of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme

Santa Croce in Gerusalemme

According to tradition it was founded by the emperor Constantine in 320 using one large chamber of the Sessorian Palace to house the relics brought by his mother Helen from Jerusalem. After the edict of Milan which in 313 declared freedom of worship even to Christians, Rome became the new capital of Christianity.

Basilica de San Pedro, Museos Vaticanos y Capilla Sixtina

Vaticano

La Plaza de San Pedro es un punto esencial para cualquier visitante a Roma, que se sentirá sobrecogido ante la majestuosidad arquitectónica del entorno. El Vaticano es un minúsculo estado independiente enclavado en el corazón de la capital italiana.

Castillo Sant'Angelo, Roma

Castel Sant'Angelo

El Castillo de Sant’Angelo o Castel Sant’ Angelo (también conocido como el Mausoleo de Adriano) es un monumento romano situado en la orilla derecha del río Tíber, en frente del pons Aelius (actual puente de Sant’Angelo), a poca distancia de la Ciudad del Vaticano.

Circus Maximus

Circo Massimo

The first circus used for chariot races lying in the valley between the Aventine and Palatine hills is said to have been built by king Tarquinius Priscus even if there are testimonies of similar races held at the time of Romulus. The track was originally bordered by banks of wooden seats. Later the starting stalls (carceres), the spina, which divided the racecourse, and stone seats were added to the older structure.

El Coliseo (Anfiteatro Flavio), Roma

Colosseo

El Coliseo de Roma es el monumento más característico de Roma. Se trata de un anfiteatro que en sus orígenes recibió el nombre de Anfiteatro Flavio.

Roman Forum

Fori Romani

The site of the Forum was a marshy and unhealthy valley which lay roughly at the centre of a circle of hills upon which grew small villages. Their inhabitants used the valley as a burial ground. In the VII cent b.C., under the Etruscan king Tarquin the Elder, the stagnant water in the Forum was drained into the Tiber through a channel which was to become the great Sewer Cloaca Maxima, it was paved and became a real square at the centre of a town. The buildings we see today in the Forum do not date back to the same period and were not discovered at the same time.

Vatican Museums

Musei Vaticani

One of the most important museum complexes in the world, it is divided into numerous splendidly arranged sections containing masterpieces by the greatest artists, collected or commissioned by Popes down through the centuries. At the end is the Sistine Chapel, in which the recent restoration has bought to light the original colors of the vault and Michelangelo’s Last Judgement, darkened by time.Viale Vaticano
phone 06 69 88 49 47
fax 06 69 88 50 61
Internet: www.vatican.va
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Hours
January, February, November and December 10.00 – 13.45, last admission 12.30. Sun closed.

From March to October 10.00 – 16.45 (last admission 15.20), Sat 10.00-14.45, last admission 13.30.Sun closed.

Closed January 1st and 6th , February 11th, March 19th , Easter Monday, May 1st , June 29th , August 15th and 16th , November 1st, December 8th, 25th and 26th and on other religious holidays.

Vatican Gardens: info and reservations 06 69 88 44 66 – fax 06 69 88 51 00

Admission Euro 13,00, reduced Euro 8,00, free of charge

Bocca della Verità Square

Pantheon

The square takes its name from the famous Mouth of Truth, the maskaron which is inside the porch of the church of St. Mary in Cosmedin. According to a famous Roman legend the threatening mouth would snap shut on the hand of the liers. The square is in the middle of an ancient commercial area between Rome and the harbour along the river by the Tiber Island and the Emporium, the warehouse.

Pyramid of Caius Cestius

Piramide Caio Cestio

Leaving St. Paul’s gate (Porta San Paolo) along the Via Ostiense, stands the original Pyramid of Caius Cestius , a burial monument that this official who was in charge of the sacred banquets had erected as his own tomb between 18 and 12b.C. It is 37mt. high, built in imitation of the Egyptian pyramids, that were in fashion in Rome after the conquest of Egypt (30 to C.). It is built of a very firm composition of mortar and small stones faced with tablets of white marble. The original entrance was effected by means of an inclined shaft about halfway up the northern side of the Pyramid.

Bath of Diocletian and Church of S. Mary of the Angels

Terme di Diocleziano e S. Maria degli Angeli

The huge rectangular area occupied by the Baths, erected between 298 and 306 A.D., is of approximately 140,000sqm, excluding the tanks, discovered in Piazza dei Cinquecento, fed by the water of the aqueduct of the Aqua Marcia. Built in brick stone, the baths could accommodate up to 3000 people simultaneously. The huge thermal complex housed a central building with calidarium, tepidarium and natatio (rooms for hot or warm baths and swimming pools filled with cold water, partly preserved) disposed along the short axis, and gymnasiums on both sides of the long axis, with a large court all around used as garden.

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