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Friday, July 29, 2011

Italy Picture Bonus round

here an odd assortment of photos that I missed when adding pics to various Italy blogs.


Michelangelo's Christ the Redeemer at Santa Maria Sopra Minerva



Inside Santa Maria Sopra Minerva

Wood inlay at the church with the leaning tower of Pisa



ceiling in same church

Ceiling of Santa Croce Florence


Raphael rooms at the Vatican


View from the Necropoli at Tarquinia


Marble floor at Trajan's market


Me and my partner in worldly travels, in front of the Coliseum.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Capitol Hill, Roman Style

It was late morning as we headed into the Roman Forum, this time, not merely to traverse it, but to explore its many ruins. In contrast to Trajan's market, which was still mostly empty when we left it, the forum was filling with clusters of tourists. Where we left off from the paved Roman roads, the earth was hard baked and dusty. We explored through the ruins, reading from our printed information about the ruins, listening to the snippets of information we caught from English speaking tour guides, whose colorful, antenna mounted scarves hung in the heat.

Despite being in the heart of such a phenomenal city, the forum fell into serious disuse and disrepair. Earth from Rome's surrounding seven hills filled in and debris covered much. It was not until the start of the 1800's that real excavation of the site began. Today, most of the buildings are merely bits and pieces still standing. Here several columns stand together, there a crumbling wall. But the forum is fascinating to me because of it's density. This was an urban landscape, a real city center. Full of temples, from that of Venus, to the Temple of Castor and Pollux the forum also housed arches commemorating various military victories, buildings used for various governmental purposes, the house of the Vestal Virgins, and the site where Caesar's ashes are believed to have been spread.









From the Forum, where Rome's Emperors ruled, we traveled to the Palatine Hill, where they lived. This place, whose name, if Wikipedia is to be believed is the origin of the very word palace, is a vast hilltop, covered with the scattered remains of gardens, multiple emperor's palaces, and perhaps a few temples. Also on the hill is the museum, housing finds from the surrounding palaces. Not only is the hill's history to be appreciated, but it's views. On one side, it overlooks the forum, on the other, Circus Maximus.











Foot weary and hot from our long day, we sought refuge in the cool darkness of San Francesco a Ripa. Our main reason for visiting was to see the Beata Ludovica Albertoni sculpture by Bernini. This heavily detailed sculpture was definitely worth our short visit.




The next morning, after two amazing weeks, we flew home.

Saturday, July 09, 2011

Trevi and Trajan


The next day we got up very early, well before any self respecting Italian would think of setting his alarm, and headed down to visit the iconic Trevi Fountain. In Rome in September, in the hours after dawn, the air is pleasant and fresh, but still, neither very cool or warm. The city smells of the cobbled streets, and the only sounds are the cooing of doves, and the occasional car. The fountain lies about a mile north of the ancient and heavily trafficked sites of the Colosseum and the Roman Forum, but the fountains manage to attract their fair share of the tourists anyway, despite being a relatively modern attraction. In a city whose history is best measured by millennia, the fountain was completed in 1762, less than 250 years ago.

The fountain draws the tourists for a few reasons, not least of which is that it is rather impressive. The large pool, and the sort of stone waterfall, ensconced with figures of Neptune, his horses and accompanying riders. All of this before a grand white roman styled palace. But there is also the various movies that have feature the fountain, perhaps most famously, La Dolce Vita. And on top of all that, there's the idea that throwing a coin in the fountain guarantees your return to the city, and who would want to miss out on that? But this early in the morning, there was no one else around. It was quiet and calm, and there was no one there but us to see us toss our coins in


From the fountain of Trevi, we traveled on to Trajan's Market. The site had just opened up for the day, and we were the first to get out and explore the streets and buildings of this former downtown Rome. The buildings are bare walled and empty floored. Unlike Pompeii, there are no relics to indicate whether this might have been a bakery, that a shop, here a tavern. But, there are discoveries to be made. This stairwell leads from a set of shops on a round plaza, up and behind, to a second level street, also lined with buildings. Here, a stone cover conceals the drainage below the street. Over it all are remnants of residences. Prime real estate then, as it would be now.



Now with the day in full progress, we turned from the business of Rome to it's governance, as we made the short walk to the forum.