As we’ve seen over and over in Europe, different eras of history coexist side by side, and nowhere is that truer than in Rome.
This church was built on a Roman temple. This column and others remain, as do the graves of several people buried during Ancient Roman times.
The church was decorated Saturday and the Dominican priest welcomed us as he was hurrying to get ready for a wedding.
The Garden of Orange Trees is next to the church. It offers beautiful views of the city from the top of Aventine, one of the seven hills on which the city is built.
The fountains of Rome – and they are everywhere – provide clear clean water. In this one, you plug the bottom of the metal font and it becomes a perfect drinking fountain. Out of sight on the right, a 4-year-old girl who just loudly objected to her mother trying to get her a drink is watching Dempsey to see how it works.
The dome of St. Peter’s Basilica.
The remaining columns of the ancient Forum.
Dempsey at the Trevi Fountain. He’d just dropped all our change into the case of a musician – no coins in the fountain.
At the Spanish steps. I like the ones Michangelo designed better.
The Colosseum, surrounded by offices, shops and restaurants. It’s certainly impressive, but its bloodstained history keeps me from wanting to tour the inside.
The fountain in St. Peter’s Square.
Two Greek temples built to acknowledge the close relationship with Greece.
This rococo building is a center for the judiciary.
The Victor Immanuel II monument and the Altar of the Fatherland celebrate the unification of Italy into one country.
The Circus Maximus and the home of the Emperors above it. Chariot races were held there. There were horses there when we went, being exercised and bathed and ready to race now. The palace above was once covered in marble, but like many ruins in Rome, its marble covering was cannibalized to build churches and other newer buildings.
Portion of the Aurelian wall built between 271 and 275 A.D. to try to protect the city from invasion by the Vandals. Much of the wall still stands.
0 Comments