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Guide di Roma e Lazio
Monumenti, musei, quartieri e natura. Guide complete con biglietti, orari e consigli pratici aggiornati.
Colosseum: Complete History from 80 AD to 2025
Seventy thousand Romans rose to their feet as one when the first pair of gladiators stepped into the arena. It was July 3, 80 AD, and the world had never seen anything like it.
Colosseum Visitor Guide 2025: Tickets and Hours
Twenty thousand people visit the Colosseum every day. Fewer than half do it right.
Colosseum Gladiators: Who They Were and How They Fought
A successful gladiator was as famous as a modern athlete — his name was scratched on the walls of Pompeii, his image cast on oil lamps, his blood believed to be medicinal.
The Colosseum Hypogeum: The Underground World Beneath the Arena
Beneath the sand where gladiators and animals died stretched a labyrinth of corridors, cages, and mechanical contraptions that made the spectacle possible — and which the audience was never meant to see.
The Colosseum Velarium: How the Awning System Worked
Whenever the sun became unbearable, eight thousand sailors of the imperial fleet would unfurl an enormous sail over the amphitheatre, covering the entire seating area. It was one of the most complex engineering systems of antiquity — and it remains a subject of scholarly debate to this day.
How to Get to the Colosseum: Metro, Bus, Walking and Taxi
The Colosseum sits at the heart of Rome, less than 30 minutes' walk from Termini station and just two metro stops from the city centre. This guide covers every way to reach it, with times, costs and practical tips updated for 2025.
Colosseum at Night: Evening Openings and What to Expect
Visiting the Colosseum after dark is a radically different experience from a daytime tour. The nocturnal illumination transforms the amphitheatre into something spectral and solemn, queues shrink dramatically, and the monument appears as Romans saw it for centuries when walking past at night. Here is everything you need to know to organise your evening visit in 2025.
Visiting the Colosseum with Children: Family Guide
Taking children to the Colosseum is absolutely doable, but requires preparation. With the right strategy — timing, routes, tickets and some storytelling — the visit becomes an unforgettable adventure. This guide is designed for parents with children aged 3 to 14.
Colosseum, Roman Forum and Palatine in One Day
The combined Colosseum–Roman Forum–Palatine ticket is one of the most complete entry passes in the world: one purchase unlocks three UNESCO sites spanning three thousand years of history. This guide helps you organise the day efficiently, avoiding queues and making the most of your available hours.
Architecture of the Colosseum: Its Structural Secrets
The Colosseum is not simply the largest amphitheatre of antiquity. It is an engineering treatise built in stone: every architectural choice responds to concrete problems of capacity, flow, acoustics, structure and spectacle. This analysis reveals the solutions that Flavian builders developed to meet an unprecedented challenge.
The Vela Aurea: The Colosseum's New Arena Floor (2023)
In 2023, for the first time in almost 1,700 years, the Colosseum has a floor again. The Vela Aurea project has restored the arena's walkable surface, offering visitors a perspective never before available in the monument's modern history. This article examines how it was built, why it is controversial, and what changes in the visitor experience.
Colosseum in Summer: Surviving the August Queues
July and August are the worst months to visit the Colosseum without a strategy. Temperatures above 35°C, queues of up to 3–4 hours, exposed areas with no shade, limited access to interior spaces. This practical guide turns the summer visit into a manageable experience — as long as you follow a few firm rules.
Accessible Colosseum: Guide for Visitors with Disabilities
The Colosseum is a first-century Roman building: it was not designed with modern accessibility in mind. However, significant improvements have been made in recent decades. This guide explains what is accessible, what is not, and how to plan your visit.
Photographing the Colosseum: Best Times and Angles
The Colosseum is one of the most photographed subjects in the world — and one of the hardest to make original. This guide analyses the moments, positions and techniques that produce quality shots, whether with a professional camera or a smartphone.
The Colosseum in Cinema and Literature
No ancient monument has inspired more films, literary works and theatrical pieces than the Colosseum. This history of its cultural representation shows how each era has projected onto the monument its own values, fears and fantasies — from the eighteenth-century Grand Tour to twenty-first-century Hollywood.
Colosseum FAQ: Everything You Need to Know
Opening hours, prices, tickets, routes, waiting times, luggage, photography, accessibility. This guide collects the most frequently asked questions from visitors preparing for the Colosseum — with answers updated for 2025.
The Levels of the Colosseum: Arena, Belvedere and Routes
From the arena floor to the fourth level, each storey of the Colosseum offers a different visual and narrative experience. This guide compares the available routes — standard, arena, hypogeum, upper levels, night visit — to help you choose the one that matches your interests and the time you have.
Colosseum and Arch of Constantine: Complete Itinerary
Less than fifty metres apart, the Colosseum and the Arch of Constantine form the most photographed monumental pair in the ancient world. This guide explores the two buildings as a historical and visual system: their origins, their architectural dialogue, and the optimal route for visiting them together.
Building the Colosseum: How Romans Built It in 8 Years
The Colosseum was built between 70 and 80 AD — approximately eight years of construction for the greatest amphitheatre of antiquity. This history of its construction reveals the extraordinary engineering capabilities of the Romans: the building site, the materials, the structural system, the workforce, and the innovations that made the seemingly impossible possible.
Colosseum: Venationes and Fights with Wild Beasts
Before the gladiators, in the modern imagination, there were the beasts. Venationes — fights with wild animals — were among the most anticipated and complex spectacles of the arena. This history of hunts in the amphitheatre explores the logistics of the shows, the animals involved, the venatores, and the historical controversy surrounding their legacy.
Vatican Museums: Complete Visit Guide 2025
Eleven kilometres of galleries, over 70,000 works on display, five millennia of art history: the Vatican Museums are one of the largest and most visited museum complexes in the world. This practical guide answers every question before your visit — tickets, opening hours, routes, logistical tips — so you don't waste a single minute of your time.
The Sistine Chapel: History, Frescoes and Secrets
The Sistine Chapel is not simply a frescoed room: it is a complete theological programme, a manifesto of papal power, and one of the absolute pinnacles of Renaissance painting. This analysis traces its history from its founding to the twentieth-century restorations — with attention to the details that group guides do not always have time to explain.
Vatican Museums Tickets 2025: Prices and Booking
The Vatican Museums are among the most congested attractions in Europe. The difference between an enjoyable visit and one spent queuing depends almost entirely on how you buy your ticket. This guide explains every option, the latest 2025 prices, the traps to avoid and the methods to save time.
The Raphael Rooms: Guide to the Four Greatest Frescoes
Four rooms. Sixteen years of work. An iconographic programme intended to demonstrate the supremacy of the Church over every form of human knowledge. The Raphael Rooms are among the most analysed pictorial cycles in art history, yet most visitors know only the School of Athens. This guide walks through all four rooms, with the details that transform the visit.
Gallery of Maps: the Vatican's Cartographic Masterpiece
One hundred and twenty metres long. Forty maps painted in trompe-l'œil. A gilded coffered ceiling that most visitors never bother to look up at. The Gallery of Maps is usually crossed as a transitional corridor toward the Raphael Rooms, yet it is a work of extraordinary political, scientific and artistic ambition. This guide explains it in the detail that museum labels leave out.
Private Tour Vatican Museums: Is It Worth It? 2025
A private tour of the Vatican Museums is one of the most expensive experiences in Roman tourism. Is it worth paying for? This comparison examines what a private tour includes, what it offers compared to a standard ticket, when it makes sense and when it is wasted money.
Vatican Museums at Dawn: How Early Access Works
An empty Sistine Chapel, morning light filtering through Danti's maps, the silent corridors of the Museums. The dawn tour of the Vatican Museums is considered by many the most memorable experience in Rome. This guide explains how it works, what it really includes and whether it is worth the cost.
Michelangelo's Last Judgement: Complete Guide
The Last Judgement is not a continuation of the ceiling. It is a different work, commissioned by a different pope, in a radically changed political and spiritual moment. Understanding this difference completely transforms the reading of what you see. This guide explains the genesis, structure, characters and secrets of the Sistine Chapel altar wall.
Vatican Museums with Children: Practical Family Guide
Taking children to the Vatican Museums is possible and can be memorable — but it requires different planning from an adult visit. The main obstacles are waiting time, the length of the route and keeping children's interest. This guide tackles these problems with practical solutions.
Vatican Picture Gallery: guide to the key works
The Vatican Picture Gallery is the most underrated museum in Rome. While thousands of visitors stream through the corridors toward the Sistine Chapel, the eighteen rooms containing Raphael, Caravaggio, Leonardo and Titian remain comparatively uncrowded. This guide explains why it deserves a stop and which works not to miss.
Vatican Necropolis: Saint Peter's tomb beneath St Peter's Basilica
Beneath St Peter's Basilica lies a first- and second-century Roman necropolis that remains one of the most extraordinary archaeological discoveries of the twentieth century. Its story is that of a search spanning centuries: was the tomb of the apostle Peter — the founder of the Catholic Church — truly beneath the papal altar? The excavations of 1940–1958 provided an answer.
Vatican Museums in the Evening: Evening Openings
The Vatican Museums open in the evening for several weeks of the year, usually from April to October. During those hours — 7 pm to 11 pm — the Sistine Chapel receives a fraction of its daytime visitors, the light changes, the pace slows. This guide explains how it works, when to book and whether it is genuinely worth it.
How to Get to the Vatican Museums: All Options
The entrance to the Vatican Museums is not in St Peter's Square. That is the first mistake visitors make: they head toward the square and cannot find the entrance. This guide explains where the entrance actually is, how to reach the Vatican Museums from every part of the city, and how long each option takes.
Borgia Apartments: Pinturicchio and the Borgias' Secrets
The Borgia Apartments lie on the floor below the Raphael Rooms, yet they are visited by only a fraction of those who reach the latter. The six rooms decorated by Pinturicchio between 1492 and 1495 for Pope Alexander VI contain some of the richest frescoes of the Roman Renaissance — and the history of the family that commissioned them is among the most discussed in Europe.
Gallery of Raphael's Tapestries: Ten Biblical Scenes
The Gallery of Tapestries is one of the most overlooked corridors in the Vatican Museums. The ten tapestries depict scenes from the Acts of the Apostles after cartoons drawn by Raphael in 1515–1516 and woven in Brussels. The original preparatory cartoons are at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London — what you see in the Vatican are the textiles made by Flemish masters from those drawings. This guide explains what to look for and why.
Gregorian Egyptian Museum: the Vatican's Egyptian Collection
The Gregorian Egyptian Museum is one of the oldest Egyptian museums in the world. Founded in 1839 by Gregory XVI — seventeen years after Champollion deciphered hieroglyphics — it holds approximately 160 original Egyptian artefacts and a collection of objects from Roman Egypt. Many works come from excavations at Hadrian's Villa in Tivoli, where the emperor had reconstructed a copy of Egypt within his imperial residence.
Vatican Museums: the mistakes to avoid
The Vatican Museums receive over six million visitors a year. Most of them see the museums in suboptimal conditions: three-hour queues, wrong routes, dress code rejections at the entrance, tickets purchased at inflated prices. This article lists the most common mistakes — and how to avoid them.
Vatican in one day: complete itinerary
A day at the Vatican includes the Vatican Museums, the Sistine Chapel and St Peter's Basilica. These are three separate places with three different entrances, at some distance from one another. This itinerary organises the day to avoid the main logistical problems and see things in the right order.
The Octagonal Courtyard: Where Art History Was Born
The Octagonal Courtyard — formerly the Belvedere Courtyard — is the starting point of the history of classical art as a modern discipline. Here Julius II assembled in 1506 the sculptures that would define the Western aesthetic canon for four centuries: the Laocoön, the Apollo Belvedere, the Belvedere Torso. Here Johann Joachim Winckelmann wrote the descriptions that established art history as a science. This article tells how an open space with orange trees and fountains became the most influential museum in history.
Vatican Museums: the short route in 90 minutes
The Vatican Museums short route takes you from Greek sculpture to the Sistine Chapel in around 90 minutes. It is signposted internally by the museum with specific markings, and covers the principal highlights without detours into secondary sections. This article describes the optimal route, what to expect and what to skip.
Roman Forum: Complete History of Ancient Rome's Centre
For nearly a thousand years, the Roman Forum was the political, religious and commercial centre of Rome. Senators and emperors, laws and triumphs, trials and sacrifices: everything passed through this space. This article tells the entire history of the Forum — from the prehistoric marsh to medieval abandonment — and describes what remains visible today.
Arch of Titus: History of Rome's Most Important Triumphal Arch
The Arch of Titus, erected in 81 AD after the emperor's death, commemorates the conquest of Judea and the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem in 70 AD. The interior panels — showing the Menorah carried in triumph and the imperial chariot — are the most significant surviving representations of the fall of the Second Temple. This article tells the history of the arch, the meaning of the reliefs and its legacy across the centuries.
Temple of Saturn: History of Rome's Treasury
The eight columns of the Temple of Saturn are among the most recognisable images of the Roman Forum. The temple, one of the oldest in Rome, housed the Roman state treasury for over a thousand years. This article tells the history of Saturn, his temple, the Saturnalia — the most important popular festival of Rome — and the economic significance of the sanctuary.
Temple of Vesta and Vestal Virgins: Sacred Fire History
The Temple of Vesta was the only circular temple in the Roman Forum and housed Rome's sacred fire — the flame that, according to tradition, could never be extinguished. The Vestals, six priestesses who served for thirty years, were among the most powerful and most constrained figures of Roman society. This article tells the history of the temple, the role of the Vestals and the cosmic meaning of the sacred fire.
Basilica of Maxentius: the Largest Building in the Forum
The three surviving arcades of the Basilica of Maxentius are among the most imposing structures in the Roman Forum. The building, begun in 306 AD and completed by Constantine in 312 AD, was the largest civic hall in Rome: 80 × 100 metres, with groin vaults reaching 35 metres in height. This article tells its history, the revolutionary construction technique and its impact on European architecture.
Via Sacra: Rome's Oldest Road
The Via Sacra runs through the Roman Forum for approximately 500 metres, linking the Capitoline Hill to the Arch of Titus and beyond to the Colosseum. It was Rome's most sacred street, walked by triumphal processions of victorious generals, imperial funeral cortèges, and citizens making their way to the Forum's principal shrines. This article traces the Via Sacra's history from Rome's foundations to the Middle Ages, describes the monuments lining its route, and examines the political and religious significance of each procession that passed along it.
The Palatine Hill: History of the Imperial Hill
The Palatine is the oldest of Rome's seven hills: Iron Age huts from the eighth century BC found here are identified by tradition with the city's founding, and it was here that successive emperors built their imposing overlapping palaces, from Augustus's modest apartment to Domitian's titanic complex. The hill's very name gave rise to the word "palace" in all Romance languages and beyond. This article reconstructs the history of the Palatine from Rome's foundation to the eighteenth century, examining successive phases of occupation, the imperial palaces, the current landscape, and the finds preserved in the Palatine Museum.
House of Augustus and House of Livia: Palatine Frescoes
The House of Augustus and the House of Livia preserve the most extraordinary in situ frescoes in all of Imperial Rome. Painted around 30–20 BC in the Second Pompeian Style, their walls offer illusionistic colonnades, fantastical gardens, theatrical masks, and architectural vistas of breathtaking quality. This article traces the history of both residences — their acquisition, the patrons, the painting technique, and the content of individual rooms — and explains why these modest spaces constitute one of the least-known yet most exceptional treasures of Roman archaeology.
The Palace of Domitian: the definitive imperial residence
The Palace of Domitian, designed by the architect Rabirius and completed around 92 AD, redefined the meaning of Roman imperial architecture for ever. For the first time, an entire urban hill was transformed into a single palatine platform uniting public, private, service, and recreational spaces in a coherent system. All subsequent emperors until the fall of Constantinople lived in the same complex or extended its structures. This article analyses Rabirius's design, the function of each section, the materials used, the political iconography, and the current state of the site.
How to Visit the Roman Forum: Complete Practical Guide
The Roman Forum is one of the most important archaeological sites in the world, but also one of the most complex to navigate independently. This practical guide answers the essential questions: how to enter, what to pay, how long to allow, what to see first, how to get around the site. Up-to-date information for organising an effective visit.
Roman Forum: Tickets and Prices 2025
How many ticket options exist for the Roman Forum? How much do they cost? Where do you buy them? When is it free? This guide answers every question about tickets for the Roman Forum, Colosseum, and Palatine, with up-to-date prices, booking options, and tips for saving time and money.
Roman Forum with Children: Practical Family Guide
Bringing children to the Roman Forum is entirely possible and can be a remarkable experience, provided you plan ahead. The site has uneven ground, little shade, and large distances to cover, but it also has incredible stories to tell. This guide helps parents organise an effective visit: what to see, how to explain it to children, what to bring, how long to allow, and how to bring the Forum to life even for the youngest visitors.
Rostra and Curia Iulia: Power and Speech in the Forum
The Rostra and Curia Iulia are the two focal points of political activity in the Roman Forum: the first is the speakers' platform, the place of public speech; the second is the home of the Senate, the deliberative chamber of the ancient world. Together they define the heart of the Roman republican and imperial system. This article analyses their history, architecture, transformations over time, and political significance.
Forums of Caesar and Augustus: Birth of the Imperial Fora
The Forum of Caesar and the Forum of Augustus mark a fundamental turning point in the urban history of Rome: for the first time, a civic space was not built by the community but by a single man who used his own name to redefine the centre of the world. This article analyses the two imperial squares — their history, architecture, temples, and political iconography — in the context of their construction and their legacy.
Arch of Septimius Severus: Triumph and Erased Memory
The Arch of Septimius Severus is one of the most complex monuments in the Roman Forum: erected in 203 AD to celebrate the Parthian victories of the emperor and his sons, it still bears visible signs of one of antiquity's most dramatic acts of memory erasure. This article examines the history, architecture, reliefs, and the mysterious gap in the inscription — testimony to an imperial fratricide.
The Imperial Fora: Complete Guide to Rome's Five Forums
Between 46 BC and 112 AD, five Roman emperors built a system of monumental squares to the north of the Roman Forum that permanently reshaped the centre of Rome. This article is a panoramic guide to the five Imperial Fora — Caesar, Augustus, Vespasian, Nerva, Trajan — with history, architecture, current state and practical visiting information.
The Column of Phocas: The Last Monument of the Roman Forum
Erected in 608 AD, the Column of Phocas is the last monument added to the Roman Forum in antiquity. A single reused Corinthian column, without architectural context, planted amid the ruins of a declining empire: the story of this small reuse monument tells of the end of the Roman world, the poetry of the fragment, and the long medieval oblivion.
Roman Forum at Sunset: Golden Light Over the Ruins
The Roman Forum at sunset is a different experience from a mid-morning visit: raking light brings out the texture of the stones, the travertine columns turn amber, the porticoes cast long shadows. This practical guide explains how to plan a late-afternoon visit to make the most of the light — with opening times, positioning advice, and photography tips.
Roman Forum in 45 Minutes: The Essential Route
Short on time but still want to experience the Roman Forum? This 45-minute route selects the five unmissable monuments, gives you the logical order to visit them without wasting steps, and explains what to look for at each. Designed for visitors arriving with a combined ticket and a limited time window.
Roman Forum in a Day: With the Palatine and Surroundings
A full day dedicated to the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill allows you to explore the entire complex without rushing, understand the historical layers, and include areas often skipped on quick visits. This itinerary organises the day into three blocks — morning, afternoon, late afternoon — with practical guidance on timing, tickets, and logistics.
Pantheon: Complete History from Antiquity to Today
The Pantheon is the best-preserved ancient Roman building in the world — and one of the very few that has never ceased to be in use since antiquity. Its history spans nearly two thousand years of continuity: pagan temple, Christian church, national pantheon. This article reconstructs the main phases of its architectural and cultural history.
The Pantheon Dome: Architecture, Engineering and Geometry
The Pantheon's dome is an anomaly in architectural history: built nearly two thousand years ago, it remains to this day the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome. This article analyses its technical characteristics, geometry, materials and the engineering system that makes it possible — along with the oculus and the phenomenon of light inside.
Pantheon: From Pagan Temple to Christian Church
The transformation of the Pantheon from a temple of the Roman gods to a Christian church is one of the most significant episodes in Rome's religious and architectural history. This article reconstructs the conversion process, the role of the imperial donation of 609 AD, and how religious continuity saved the building from almost certain destruction.
Raphael at the Pantheon: The Tomb of the Renaissance Master
Raphael's tomb in the Pantheon is one of the most meaning-laden sites in the entire history of art. In 1520, following the painter's death at just 37, the decision was taken to bury him in Rome's most venerable monument. This article reconstructs the circumstances of his death, the choice of the Pantheon, the tomb itself and its significance in the history of the cult of the artist.
Pantheon: The Royal Tombs and the Italian Nation
With Italian unification, the Pantheon acquired an entirely new function: it became the burial site of Italy's kings and was transformed into the new nation's principal secular monument. This article traces the history of the royal tombs, the significance of this choice, the tensions with the Church and the complex relationship between the Pantheon and modern Italian identity.
Pantheon: Opening Hours, Tickets and How to Get There
Everything you need to know before visiting the Pantheon: up-to-date hours, ticket prices, how to buy them, free admission options, how to reach the monument and the essential practical information to plan your visit.
Pantheon Interior: Complete Visitor's Guide
A visit to the Pantheon requires orientation: the rotunda may seem homogeneous at first glance, but it conceals layers of elements that reward careful attention. This guide systematically walks through the interior of the Pantheon, telling you what to look for, where to find it and why it matters.
Pantheon: The Best Time to See the Oculus Light
The Pantheon's oculus — the open circle of 8.9 metres at the dome's apex — is one of the most extraordinary visual phenomena in world architecture. The light does not simply enter: it draws shapes, it moves, and at certain moments it transforms the entire rotunda into something close to the sacred. This article explains what time to come, what to expect, and why the Pantheon's light is unlike any other.
Pantheon: How to Avoid the Queues
The Pantheon is among Rome's most visited monuments, but with the right strategy waiting times can be significantly reduced — or almost eliminated entirely. This article analyses the causes of queues, the best times to visit, and concrete techniques for getting inside without wasting time.
Pantheon: Piazza della Rotonda and the Neighbourhood
The Pantheon does not exist in isolation: it is surrounded by one of Rome's most densely layered urban fabrics. This guide describes the square in front of the Pantheon, the monuments in the immediate vicinity, and the character of the neighbourhood that houses them — information that transforms a Pantheon visit into an exploration of the historic centre.
Pantheon: Restaurants and Cafés Nearby
The Pantheon stands at the heart of one of Rome's most touristy neighbourhoods. This means an excellent location, but also generally higher prices and very variable quality. This guide identifies where to eat and drink well near the Pantheon — distinguishing between places that are worth the price and those to avoid.
Pantheon Photography: Tips and Best Positions
The Pantheon is one of the world's most photographed buildings, but photographing it well requires planning that goes beyond simply pointing a camera. This article guides you through choosing the right moment, the best positions and the basic techniques for capturing meaningful images of both the interior and exterior.
Pantheon: Visiting with Children
The Pantheon is surprisingly child-friendly. Unlike many museums, it doesn't demand hours of attention: it's a single space that can be visited in 20–30 minutes, with powerful visual elements that immediately capture even the youngest visitors. This guide helps parents plan an effective visit with children of different ages.
Pantheon: walking itinerary in the neighbourhood
The Pantheon sits in the heart of one of Rome's most historically dense neighbourhoods. Within a 15-minute walk, republican temples, Renaissance churches, baroque palaces and medieval piazzas are all concentrated together. This itinerary guides you on a roughly 2-hour walk that begins and ends at the Pantheon, with shorter or longer variants available.
Pantheon: where to go before and after your visit
Visiting the Pantheon alone takes 30–45 minutes. The surrounding neighbourhood, however, deserves just as much time. This guide suggests what to do before going in, what to see immediately afterwards, and how to combine the Pantheon with the other main attractions of the historic centre in a half-day or full day.
Pantheon: history of the Rotonda neighbourhood
The neighbourhood around the Pantheon is not merely a backdrop: it is visible historical layering. From the Augustan Campo Marzio to Agrippa's baths, from Egyptian cults at the Temple of Isis to medieval strata hidden beneath today's stones, this is one of Rome's most continuously inhabited areas. This guide traces 2,500 years of history across a few city blocks.
Pantheon: accessibility for visitors with disabilities
The Pantheon is one of Rome's most accessible monuments for people with mobility impairments. The interior floor is flat, the entrance has only one manageable step, and the building requires no stair-climbing. This guide provides detailed information for planning a visit without surprises.
Pantheon: guided tours
The Pantheon can be visited independently, but a guided tour adds a level of understanding that self-guided visits cannot provide. This guide analyses the different formats available, indicative prices, and helps you choose the type of visit that best suits your situation.
Pantheon: the fountain in Piazza della Rotonda
The fountain in front of the Pantheon is one of the most photographed features of the piazza, yet it is often treated as mere backdrop. It has its own history spanning four centuries: from Giacomo della Porta's original design in 1575 to the obelisk added by Pope Clement XI in 1711. This guide tells that story and points out the details worth looking for.
Pantheon: Half-Day Itinerary in the Historic Centre
The Pantheon sits at the heart of one of Rome's densest historic neighbourhoods. In a half-day — three and a half to four hours — you can build an itinerary that combines the Pantheon with the churches, squares, and monuments of the surrounding quarter. This guide offers a practical route with timings, distances, and logistical advice.
Trevi Fountain: history and origins
The Trevi Fountain is the largest Baroque fountain in Rome and one of the most famous in the world. Its history did not begin in the eighteenth century with Nicola Salvi: it is rooted in ancient Rome and the Acqua Virgo aqueduct built by Agrippa in 19 BC. This guide traces the key stages from ancient spring to Baroque monument.
Trevi Fountain: architecture and iconography
The Trevi Fountain is not simply a decorative object in a square: it is an architectural scenography built expressly to merge with the palace behind it. This guide analyses the structure, sculptures, and meaning of individual elements — from Neptune to the Tritons, from the historical reliefs to the barber's vase.
Trevi Fountain: the coin legend
Every day, roughly 3,000 coins are thrown into the Trevi Fountain. Each year, the total exceeds one million euros. The tradition is well known: one coin to return to Rome, two to fall in love, three to get married. But where did this custom come from? When was it born, who invented it, and where does the money actually go?
Trevi Fountain: how to get there
The Trevi Fountain is located in the Rione Trevi, one of the densest and busiest areas of Rome's historic centre. The entire area is ZTL — Zona a Traffico Limitato (restricted traffic zone). This guide explains your arrival options: metro, bus, walking from key points, taxi, and private driver.
Trevi Fountain: hours, tickets and prices
The Trevi Fountain is an open-air monument, accessible in principle at any time. It has no "opening hours" in the museum sense. This guide clarifies the actual situation: when you can visit, whether you need to pay, and what to expect at different times of day.
Trevi Fountain at night: the evening visit
The Trevi Fountain is one of the few Roman monuments that actually improves after sunset. Artificial light turns the travertine stone golden, the crowds thin out and the piazza recovers a human scale. This guide describes how and when to make the most of a nocturnal visit.
Trevi Fountain: When to Visit to Avoid the Crowds
The Trevi Fountain draws millions of visitors every year. The difference between a frustrating experience and a memorable one often comes down to the time of day and the season chosen. This guide analyses tourist flow and identifies the best windows for experiencing the fountain without the pressure of the masses.
Trevi Fountain: what to see nearby
The Trevi Fountain is not an isolated monument: it sits in the heart of the Rione Trevi, within easy walking distance of some of the most important attractions in Rome's historic centre. This guide describes what lies in the immediate neighbourhood and how to combine a visit to the fountain with nearby sights.
The Rione Trevi: history of the neighbourhood
The Rione Trevi is one of Rome's most historically layered neighbourhoods. Inhabited since antiquity thanks to the Aqua Virgo aqueduct, transformed through the Middle Ages, densely built up during the Renaissance and Baroque periods, it is today the neighbourhood that houses the Trevi Fountain, the Quirinal Palace and the Baroque urban fabric of the northern historic centre.
Trevi Fountain: Restorations and Conservation Over Time
The Trevi Fountain has 262 years of history and has undergone numerous restoration, maintenance and conservation campaigns. The most recent and comprehensive restoration, financed by Fendi, was completed in 2016. This article reconstructs the history of the monument's care, from its early decades after inauguration to the present day.
La Dolce Vita, Fellini and the Trevi Fountain
The Trevi Fountain scene in Federico Fellini's "La Dolce Vita" (1960) is one of the most iconic images in the history of cinema. It permanently transformed the eighteenth-century monument into a global cultural symbol, overlaying the Roman Baroque with the dimensions of modernity, desire and the unattainable. This article traces the history of that scene, its cultural context and the legacy it produced.
The Aqua Virgo: The Water Feeding the Trevi Fountain
The water in the Trevi Fountain does not come from the modern water supply. It comes from the **Aqua Virgo**, an aqueduct built in 19 BC by Marcus Agrippa and still in operation today — the oldest original Roman aqueduct still functioning in the world. This is its history.
Photographing the Trevi Fountain: practical guide
The Trevi Fountain is one of the most photographed subjects in the world. Taking a decent photo is easy. Taking a memorable one requires planning. This practical guide tells you when to go, where to position yourself, and how to manage the crowd to bring home a shot worthy of the monument.
Where to Eat Near the Trevi Fountain
The Trevi district is one of Rome's busiest neighbourhoods. This also means it has one of the highest concentrations of tourist-oriented establishments — cafés and restaurants with inflated prices and mediocre quality. This guide shows you where to eat and drink well in the area, distinguishing good options from tourist traps.
Trevi Fountain: Accessibility for Visitors with Disabilities
Visiting the Trevi Fountain with a wheelchair, with limited mobility, or with a child in a pushchair requires some preparation. This practical guide explains the real access conditions, the easiest routes, and the challenges to consider before planning your visit.
Guided tours of the Trevi Fountain: what to choose
The Trevi Fountain is a monument you understand better with a guide. The history of the Aqua Virgo, of Nicola Salvi, of the patron Clement XII, of the 2015 Fendi restoration — all of this escapes those who only look at the façade. This practical guide explains the different types of tours available and how to choose the one that suits you best.
Trevi Fountain with children: practical tips
Taking children to the Trevi Fountain is a classic stop on any family trip to Rome. The fountain is visually spectacular, the coin ritual is irresistible for younger visitors, and its history is full of narrative elements suitable for any age. This practical guide answers the logistical questions that arise when travelling with children.
Trevi and Surroundings: A Morning in the Heart of Rome
This walking itinerary covers the Trevi Fountain and the most significant sites in the district, with logistics designed for those who want to see as much as possible in the shortest time. Estimated duration: 3–4 hours. Total distance: approximately 3 km.
Trevi Fountain: curiosities and legends
The Trevi Fountain is one of the most photographed monuments in the world, but most of those who visit it know only the surface. Behind the Baroque façade lies a series of stories, little-known facts, and curiosities that make it even more interesting. Here is a selection.
Trevi Fountain: Complete Guide
Everything you need to know about the Trevi Fountain in one article: history, sculptures, opening hours, how to get there, when to visit, and why it's truly worth understanding beyond just seeing.