Two Weeks in Rome
Day
1
Arrive and get settled; check on neighborhood food stores,
coffee bars, laundries, and rosticcerie.
Day
2
Morning: Start at the Colosseum and Arch of Constantine.
Walk from there through the Forum to the Campdoglio.
This is an entire half-day, at least. Lunch in
the immediately adjacent Jewish Quarter at a place like
Giggetto. Afternoon: tour the ghetto itself, perhaps
with a tour of the Synagogue.
Day
3
Start again at the same place as yesterday: the Colosseum,
but today in the other direction. In the morning, visit
San Clemente, then walk along Via Santi Quattro to the
church of the same name, being sure to ring the bell
for the nun to open the little chapel with the frescos,
also trying to see the delightful cloister. Then continue
walking on Via Santi Quattro up to the Basilica of San
Giovanni in Laterano where you should see the theatrical
facade, the immense interior, and another charming cloister.
Lunch at a simple trattoria like the Osteria Da Angelino
in Via Machiavelli. After lunch, the Domus Aurea with
coffee/ice cream at the little kiosk in the park.
Day
4
Boat or train to Ostia Antica. Evening at one of the
restaurants on the Tiber. Or, perhaps, at Ostia Lido
for fish.
Day
5
Piazza Navona, the Pantheon, SantIvo, Santa Maria
della Pace. This is one of Romes most delightful.
Give it the whole day.
Day
6
A full days walk, starting at the Piazza Bocca
della Verita, visiting, first the delightful churches
of Santa Maria in Cosmedin and San Giorgio in Velabro.
Then, past the Circus Maximus up to the rose garden
to Santa Sabina, our favorite church in Rome. There
is a beautiful park adjacent with good views over the
city and St. Peters. Bring a picnic. Look through
the keyhole in the Piazza dei Cavalieri di Malta. (Try
your best to get to see the cloister at Santa Sabina,
not always open. You might also try your luck at getting
into the grounds of the Order of Malta, now open more
or less regularly on Saturday mornings.) Late lunch
at Perilli. Finally, the Protestant Cemetery, the most
beautiful cemetery in the world.
Day
7
Trastevere, especially the part around Santa Cecilia
and the Piazza dei Mercanti.
Day
8
Explore the area called suburra, oldest in Rome, now
generally called Monti, which centers on Via Madonna
dei Monti and includes such charming streets as Via
degli Zingari. Also San Pietro in Vincoli, Santa Maria
Maggiore, and especially the Byzantine chapel in Santa
Prassede. Lunch or dinner at Tempio di Mecenate or Trattoria
Monti or, if youre splurging, at Agata e Romeo.
Day
9
Excursion by bus: Tivoli and Hadrian's Villa. This is
an all-day trip.
Day
10
Again, start at the Colosseum. Walk up Via Claudia to
the churches of Santo Stefano Rotondo and Santa Maria
in Domnica. Then through the Parco Celimontana (where
on summer evenings there are excellent jazz concerts)
to the church of Santi Giovanni e Paolo and San Gregorio
Magno (headquarters of Mother Teresas order of
nuns in Rome). This will bring you to the Circus Maximus,
and from there you should spend the rest of the day
on the Palatine Hill.
Day
11
An unusual, untouristy excursion: the Villa Torlonia
on Via Nomentana, a gorgeous park where youll
find the Museo della Casina delle Civette, a delightful
Art Nouveau building housing a little museum of Art
Nouveau and Art Deco glass. From here continue on by
bus up the Via Nomentana to the Sant'Agnese/Santa Costanza
catacombs.
Day
12
Finally (how could we dare to skip it?) the Vatican.
Our honest advice is to make it no more than a half-day
in the afternoon. 12-2 in the basilica itself,
leave an additional hour at the beginning if you want
to torture yourself climbing up the cupola. 2-230 snack.
300-500 the Vatican Museum, proceeding rapidly to the
Sistine Chapel, then back to see some stuff on the way
out.
Day
13
Choose an unusual small museum to visit, plus
a park. Among our favorites: the Museo Mario Praz; the
Museo Hendrik Cristian Andersen; the Schwarz Collection
in the Galleria dArte Moderna in Villa Borghese;
the Farnesina near the Orto Botanico; the Museo Barracco,
when it finally reopens, a wonderful place; or the Centro
Montemartini, ancient sculpture displayed in a restored
factory full of big industrial machinery. Among the
parks, obviously there is the Villa Borghese, but we
absolutely love the Orto Botanico and the Protestant
Cemetery, too.
Day
14
A final day meandering through a favorite neighborhood.
Day
15
Ciao!
And what weve left
out!!!! The Galleria Borghese. The Caravaggios in San
Luigi dei Francesi, Santa Maria del Popolo, and SantAgostino.
The Palazzo Spada. All the big museums: what a scandal!
but Rome is not a museum city in our opinion.
The Baroque Excess of Santa Maria della Vittoria and
the Bernini within.
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