Jump to content

List of tourist attractions in Rome

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 75.69.0.58 (talk) at 18:26, 31 October 2009 (<ref name="rapporto2006"/> found at Rome). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Rome is regarded as one of the world's most beautiful ancient cities,[1] and contains vast amounts of priceless works of art, palaces, museums, parks, churches, gardens, basilicas, temples, villas, piazzas, theatres, and other venues in general. As one of the world's most important and visited cities,[2] there are numerous popular tourist attractions. In 2005, the city received 19.5 million global visitors, up of 22.1% from 2001.[3]


Churches, Cathedrals and Basilicas

There are over 900 churches in Rome. Here is a list of some of the four most popular and famous:

St Peter's Basilica and Vatican City, in Rome are where the bishop of Rome (pope) resides. The Vatican City is in Italy, however is not part of the country, as it is an independant nation.
Alessandro Galilei's façade for the Basilica of St. John Lateran.
  • St Peter's Basilica (Latin: Basilica Sancti Petri), officially known in Italian as the Basilica Papale di San Pietro in Vaticano and commonly known as St. Peter's Basilica, is located within the Vatican City. It is found in the Vatican City and a very popular and iconic tourist attraction in Rome. Since the Pope resides there, it is one of the most important centres for Christian pilgrimage, and is commonly regarded as the "home of the Roman Catholic Church", since it is where St Peter set up the first Christian Church.[4] St. Peter's Basilica has the largest interior of any Christian church in the world, holding 60,000 people.[5] It is also the symbolic "Mother church" of the Catholic Church and is regarded as one of the holiest Christian sites. It has been described as "holding a unique position in the Christian world" and as "the greatest of all churches of Christendom".[6][7][8] In Catholic tradition, it is the burial site of its namesake Saint Peter, who was one of the twelve apostles of Jesus and, according to tradition, first Bishop of Rome and therefore first in the line of the papal succession.





Palaces, Museums, Fountains, Piazzas, Parks, Villas, Monuments and Buildings

A list of popular monuments in Rome:

The interior of the Vatican Museums.
The Trevi Fountain.
The Spanish Steps, seen from Piazza di Spagna


  • The Trevi Fountain (Italian: Fontana di Trevi) is a fountain in the Trevi rione in the city, Italy. Standing 25.9 meters (85 feet) high and 19.8 meters (65 feet) wide, it is the largest Baroque fountain in the city. Approximately 3,000 euros are thrown into the fountain each day. The money has been used to subsidize a supermarket for Rome's needy. However, there are regular attempts to steal coins from the fountain. [17]


  • The Spanish Steps (Template:Lang-it) are a set of steps in Rome, Italy, climbing a steep slope between the Piazza di Spagna at the base and Piazza Trinità dei Monti, dominated by the church of Trinità dei Monti. The Scalinata is the longest and widest staircase in Europe.[18] The monumental stairway of 138 steps was built with French diplomat Étienne Gueffier’s bequeathed funds of 20,000 scudi, in 1723–1725, linking the Bourbon Spanish Embassy to the Holy See, today still located in Palazzo Monaldeschi in the piazza below, with the Trinità dei Monti above.


  • Piazza Navona is a city square in Rome, Italy. It follows the plan of an ancient Roman circus, the 1st century Stadium of Domitian,[19] where the Romans came to watch the agones ("games"): It was known as 'Circus Agonalis' (competition arena). It is believed that over time the name changed to 'in agone' to 'navone' and eventually to 'navona'.


  • Villa Borghese gardens is a large[20] landscape garden in the naturalistic English manner in Rome, containing a number of buildings, museums (see Galleria Borghese) and attractions. It is the second largest public park in Rome (80 hectares or 148 acres) after that of the Villa Doria Pamphili. The gardens were developed for the Villa Borghese Pinciana ("Borghese villa on the Pincian Hill"), built by the architect Flaminio Ponzio, developing sketches by Scipione Borghese, who used it as a villa suburbana, a party villa, at the edge of Rome, and to house his art collection. The gardens as they are now were remade in the early nineteenth century.


Ancient Roman sites

List of principal Roman archaeological sites:

The Colosseum, Rome's second and the world's 39th most popular tourist attraction, with 4 million tourists a year[21].
The interior of the Pantheon in the 18th century, painted by Giovanni Paolo Panini.[22]


  • The Pantheon (Template:Pron-en or /ˈpænθi.ən/,[26] Template:Lang-la,[nb 1] from Template:Lang-el, meaning "Every god") is a building in Rome, originally built by Marcus Agrippa as a temple to all the gods of Ancient Rome, and rebuilt in the early 2nd century AD. A near-contemporary writer, Cassius Dio, speculates that the name comes from the statues of many gods placed around the building, or from the resemblance of the dome to the heavens.[27] The intended degree of inclusiveness of the dedication to "all" the gods is debated.[citation needed] Since the French Revolution, when the church of Sainte-Geneviève, Paris, was deconsecrated and turned into a secular monument, the Panthéon, the generic term pantheon may be applied to any building in which illustrious dead are honoured or buried.[26] The building is circular with a portico of three ranks of huge granite Corinthian columns (eight in the first rank and two groups of four behind) under a pediment opening into the rotunda, under a coffered, concrete dome, with a central opening (oculus) open to the sky. Almost two thousand years after it was built, the Pantheon's dome is still the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome [citation needed]. The height to the oculus and the diameter of the interior circle are the same, 43.3 metres (142 ft).[28] A rectangular structure links the portico with the rotunda. It is one of the best preserved of all Roman buildings. It has been in continuous use throughout its history, and since the 7th century, the Pantheon has been used as a Roman Catholic church dedicated to "St. Mary and the Martyrs" but informally known as "Santa Maria Rotonda."[29]


  • The Roman Forum (Latin: Forum Romanum), sometimes known by its original Latin name, is located between the Palatine hill and the Capitoline hill of the city of Rome. It is the central area around which the ancient Roman civilization developed. Citizens referred to the location as the "Forum Magnum" or just the "Forum". The oldest and most important structures of the ancient city are located in the forum, including its ancient former royal residency, the Regia, and the surrounding complex of the Vestal virgins. The Old Republic had its formal Comitium there where the senate, as well as Republican government began. The forum served as a city square and central hub where the people of Rome gathered for justice, and faith. The forum was also the economic hub of the city and considered to be the center of the Republic and Empire.

Notes

  1. ^ Rarely Pantheum. This appears in Pliny's Natural History (XXXVI.38) in describing this edifice: Agrippae Pantheum decoravit Diogenes Atheniensis; in columnis templi eius Caryatides probantur inter pauca operum, sicut in fastigio posita signa, sed propter altitudinem loci minus celebrata.

References

  1. ^ "10 of the World's Most Beautiful Ancient Cities | WebEcoist | Green Living". WebEcoist. Retrieved 2009-10-17.
  2. ^ Caroline Bremner. "Top 150 City Destinations London Leads the Way". Euromonitor International. Retrieved 2008-11-09.
  3. ^ Rapporto Censis 2006
  4. ^ http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11744a.htm
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference size was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  6. ^ James Lees-Milne describes St Peter's Basilica as "a church with a unique position in the Christian world" in Lees-Milne 1967, p. 12.
  7. ^ Banister Fletcher, the renowned architectural historian calls it "...The greatest of all churches of Christendom" in Fletcher 1996, p. 719.
  8. ^ "The greatest church in Christendom",Roma 2000
  9. ^ a b "Basilica papale" (in Italian). Vicariatus Urbis — Portal of the Diocese of Rome. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  10. ^ Ott, Michael (1913). "Our Lady of the Snow" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  11. ^ Major Basilica of St. Mary Major, St. Mary Major Basilica, Dedication of St. Mary Major Basilica, Boston Magazine. Other names in the Italian language are Basilica di Santa Maria della Neve and Basilica Liberiana, in English Our Lady of the Snow and the Liberian Basilica. In Latin it is called Basilica Sanctae Mariae or Mariae Majoris or ad Neves, that is the Basilica of Saint Mary or of Mary Major or of the Snows.
  12. ^ Basilicas
  13. ^ The Benedict XVI’s theological act of renouncing the title of "Patriarch of the West" has a consequence that the basilica changed its name to become the Papal basilica of Saint Mary Major, as its official websites states.
  14. ^ Benedict XVI’s theological act of renouncing the title of "Patriarch of the West" had as consequence that Roman Catholic patriarchal basilicas are today officially known as Papal basilicas.
  15. ^ Cite error: The named reference touring.it was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  16. ^ http://www.itvnews.tv/Blog/Blog/the-50-most-visited-places.html
  17. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6188052.stm BBC News. Trevi coins to fund food for poor.
  18. ^ Boyer Gillies, Linda (February 1972). "An Eighteenth-Century Roman View Panini's Scalinata della Trinità dei Monti". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin. 30 (4): 176–184. doi:10.2307/3258528.
  19. ^ Roth, Leland M. (1993). Understanding Architecture: Its Elements, History and Meaning (First ed.). Boulder, CO: Westview Press. p. 233. ISBN 0-06-430158-3.
  20. ^ The gardens cover eighty hectares.
  21. ^ http://www.itvnews.tv/Blog/Blog/the-50-most-visited-places.html
  22. ^ Another view of the interior by Panini (1735), Liechenstein Museum, Vienna
  23. ^ I H Evans (reviser), Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable (Centenary edition Fourth impression (corrected); London: Cassell, 1975), page 1163
  24. ^ Francis Trevelyan Miller, Woodrow Wilson, William Howard Taft, Theodore Roosevelt. America, the Land We Love (1915), page 201.
  25. ^ http://www.itvnews.tv/Blog/Blog/the-50-most-visited-places.html
  26. ^ a b "Pantheon". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. revised December 2008. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Check date values in: |date= (help)
  27. ^ Quoted in MacDonald, William (2002). The Pantheon: design, meaning, and progeny (2 ed.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 76. ISBN 9780674010192.
  28. ^ Rasch 1985, p. 119
  29. ^ MacDonald 1976, p. 18