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- Giorno 25
- sabato 15 giugno 2024 09:26
- ☀️ 20 °C
- Altitudine: 128 m
ItaliaMonte S. Angelo40°38’54” N 14°24’43” E
Well that was unexpected!

Will explain later.
Today marks the last day of our tour. We ate breakfast looking at Mt Vesuvius one last time before boarding the bus and heading back through the winding streets of Sorrento and hitting the autostrade for Rome.
The Sorrento Peninsula is a seriously beautiful place, the food was excellent, and the people friendly. The only negative - its beaches don’t match Australia’s.
It was a pretty uneventful trip back to Rome. It took about 3 hours.
Being a Saturday Rome’s streets were quieter than usual. That is until we hit the unexpected bit!
Seems Rome has a Mardi Gras. And it was today. And it started right outside our hotel!
Luckily we arrived about 2pm and it didn’t get going until closer to 3.30pm so we managed to get in and dump the bags before the streets were closed and the crowds descended.
We went for a walk around and ended up going to Trevi Fountain again. This time the water was flowing so we did the coin thing and walked around a bit. We had fun trying to get back into our hotel as by then the streets were jam packed and the music blasting. We hung out our hotel window and took some photos.
We then went to a local restaurant to say goodbye to our fellow travellers. Most of them head home or to other parts of Europe tomorrow. T and I are here until Friday so the adventure continues!Leggi altro
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- Giorno 25
- sabato 15 giugno 2024
- ☀️ 25 °C
- Altitudine: 372 m
ItaliaPalazzo Compagna40°38’59” N 14°36’46” E
Spring in Italy

It has just changed to summer in Italy and it is a beautiful time of year to visit. At the flowers are out and Italians love growing things.
Attached is a collection of flower photos I have taken so far.Leggi altro
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- Giorno 26
- domenica 16 giugno 2024
- ⛅ 30 °C
- Altitudine: 69 m
ItaliaMuseum of Palazzo Massimo alle Terme, Roma41°54’4” N 12°29’52” E
Rome

Today was one of our free days in Rome so we decided to get out and see the city.
First stop was the Spanish Steps. Built in the 1700s to link the top of a hill with the bottom they are very impressive. It was really starting to warm up so we found Babingtons Tea Rooms just at the bottom of the steps for some refreshments.
We then headed up to Piazza del Popolo which is at the start of the main shopping strip in Rome, Via del Corso. Being a Sunday it was closed to (most) traffic so it was a bit easier to walk along. The prices are not massively different to what you find at home but it was a nice walk.
On the way back to the hotel a car club for Fiat Bambinos went past making a lot of noise and with a police escort. There would have been about 50 cars all classics.
We had a quiet afternoon and evening at the hotel.Leggi altro
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- Giorno 27
- lunedì 17 giugno 2024
- ☀️ 32 °C
- Altitudine: 69 m
ItaliaMuseum of Palazzo Massimo alle Terme, Roma41°54’4” N 12°29’52” E
Food glorious food!

Today we went for a food tour in the Jewish Ghetto area of Rome.
The Jewish Ghetto was set up by Pope Paul IV in 1555 and it would not have been a pleasant place to live back then. It is right on the river so would have flooded on regular occasions and it was a bit out of the way.
In 1943 the ghetto was closed by the Nazis and any residents were sent to the camps. Of the 1000 or so people sent just 16 came back after the war. To remember these people there are brass plaques mounted on the ground outside the buildings where the people lived.
Now it is one of the most expensive areas in Rome in which to live.
The food tour started with a visit to a deli for some cheeses and cold meats. We then went to a pizza shop selling slices of pizza by weight. Then another place to try stuffed zucchini flowers and balls of rice and cheese called suppli (or surprise) in Italian. Then across the river to have pasta. Lastly a visit to one of the better gelato shops in town.
Needless to say we didn’t need lunch!
When we crossed the river we went over the Pont Fabricio which is the oldest bridge in Rome built in 62BC. It took us to Isola Tiberina which is a small island in the Tiber River which is the site of Rome’s main maternity hospital.
The guide also talked about how difficult it is to build things in Rome. The Rome metro only has three lines and the last one took 35 years to build. The problem is of course that every time they dig a hole they discover something that requires full archaeological investigation so everything gets delayed.
After the food tour we went back across the river to visit the Pantheon.
This iconic building had a number of earlier versions which all burnt down. This one was built around 126 and has been in constant use ever since. The dome is 43m across and 43m high and 2000 years after it was built it remains the largest unreinforced concrete dome in the world. It has a hole in its roof called the oculus and drains in the floor for when it rains.
It has a number of Royal tombs and also tombs of key figures from the time. The granite pillars out the front are from Egypt and are unique in that they are each one solid piece of stone. Usually they are in a number of pieces.
Really interesting.
After our visit it was time to retire to the hotel for a rest and a drink at the rooftop barLeggi altro
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- Giorno 28
- martedì 18 giugno 2024 11:31
- ☀️ 33 °C
- Altitudine: 30 m
ItaliaPorta San Sebastiano41°52’24” N 12°30’8” E
Catacombs and crypts

Tuesday saw us doing the catacombs and crypts tour of Rome. The Ancient Romans had some odd ideas about death, like I have described previously bits of saints are stored in different churches, but today’s tour showed some other ways people were farewelled.
First stop the Museum and Crypt of the Capuchin Friars. We can’t take photos so you’ll have to Google to see pictures but this is rather macabre. The Capuchins are a branch of the Franciscans and in their crypt they have soil transported to Rome from the holy land. When a Capuchin friar dies he can then be buried in the soil of the holy land. All good.
But they would fast run out of space, and soil, unless …. yep after a while they dig up their bones to make room for more bodies. The bones are then piled in the crypts or stuck to the walls and ceilings in creepy patterns and designs. There were a couple of complete skeletons there but most were just bits and pieces.
They do this to try and drive home the fact life is short and we need to recognise our own mortality. There were the remains of about 3,700 bodies in total.
Next stop were the Catacombs of St. Callixtus which are just outside the old walls of Rome. No photos here either so have a look on Google.
These started about the second century and went until about the fifth or sixth centuries before they were abandoned. Previously bodies were buried wherever which caused public health issues so the church decided it would create these underground tunnels where anyone could be buried. There were a number of popes and many thousands of others from all levels of society interred.
Over the centuries grave robbers destroyed much of what was left of the bodies and any marble grave markers but you could still get an idea of the scale. There are about 20 kms of passageways and space for 500,000 bodies. As they needed more space they just dug the existing walkways deeper so you could see niches for bodies stacked six or seven high. Infant mortality was about 30% at the time so there are many small niches as well. Wealthy families could pay to have their own little rooms in the catacombs with frescoes painted on the ceilings and walls.
Very interesting and being up to 12m underground it was very cool on a hot Roman day.
Next stop was the Basilica of Saint Nicholas in Prison. The current church was built in 1599 but in an example of what is called archaeological lasagne it was built on top of two previous pagan temples. In this church we could take photos. It was similar to the Basilica di San Clemente we visited previously.
You could see below ground how the previous temple’s columns were included in the new designs. Once again there were a few bones left in various locations in the lower levels.
Next door to this church was the ruins of an arena older than the Colosseum. The Marcellus Theater was commissioned by Julius Caesar and built around 12 BC. It is next door to the Portico of Octavia we walked past on the food tour yesterday.
By now it was well after lunchtime and very hot so we went up into the Jewish Ghetto area and found a neat restaurant called Costanzas. A good pasta with beer and capped off with some lemon sorbet, excellent!
We then walked up across the river before deciding it was time to head back to the hotel to cool off.Leggi altro
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- Giorno 29
- mercoledì 19 giugno 2024 09:08
- ☁️ 27 °C
- Altitudine: 11 m
ItaliaFontana del Tirreno41°53’43” N 12°28’57” E
Winding down

Today was our second last full day in Italy. It also marks 4 weeks since we left Sydney. We still have a few things to do and today we wanted to see the Victor Emmanuel II Memorial up close.
We bought the tickets online and headed off to see what we could see.
This memorial was built between 1885 and 1935 to commemorate Victor Emmanuel II the first King when Italy unified in 1861. It is commonly known as the Wedding Cake or the Typewriter as it is a bit of an unusual shape. That said it is a very important monument to the Italians and hosts their Tomb of the Unknown Soldier from WW1.
First stop was the roof where you get panoramic views across Rome. There aren’t many tall buildings in Rome so it is difficult to get above and see it from a high point. The photos show you what the view is like. It was just after 9.30 when we arrived so it wasn’t too crowded and being a bit hazy it wasn’t too hot.
The Memorial also contains the Central Museum of the Risorgimento which is a Museum covering the unification of Italy in 1861. Really interesting, Europe at that time was a bit of a mess with lots of wars happening and Italy was made up of a number of separate states. Garibaldi and a few others managed to pull them all together to make the Italy we know today.
After the memorial our ticket included access to the National Museum of the Palazzo di Venezia which was across the road from the Memorial.
This building became the seat of the facist government in the first half of the 20th century. It was a beautiful building with enclosed gardens and porticos. It was originally built as a Papal Residence in the 1400s but never completely finished as Popes came and went.
Anyway it was a nice place to look around as well as being a bit disconcerting to know Hitler and Mussolini walked the same halls.
Afterwards we went to the supermarket to organise some lunch - a reasonably decent salad. Am looking forward to some veges when I get home, haven’t had much on this holiday!
We then had the obligatory afternoon drinks on the rooftop followed by dinner at a local restaurant.Leggi altro
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- Giorno 30
- giovedì 20 giugno 2024 08:52
- ⛅ 27 °C
- Altitudine: 50 m
ItaliaSan Pietro in Vincoli41°53’37” N 12°29’33” E
The scene of a murder!

Our last full day in Rome.
It was going to be a hot one so we were up early and headed to the Basilica San Pietro in Vincoli (Saint Peter in Chains). It holds a Michaelangelo statue which we wanted to check out. We headed down Via Cavour to Arco dei Borgia and climbed the steps.
This flight of stairs is meant to have been the scene for a couple of murders back in the 1400s and did have a dark feel about it.
The outside of the church itself was very plain. And inside not massively ornate but the Michaelangelo sculpture does tend to dominate. There is also a crypt with the glass box containing a set of manacles that Peter was meant to be incarcerated by when he was freed by an angel. Over the years a couple of miracles are meant to have happened when someone has touched or been touched by these chains, including a fixing of a goitre which is depicted in a painting on the ceiling of the church.
It never ceases to amaze me how the artists of the 1400s managed to create such amazing statues. Michaelangelo was obviously a master and the statue in this church was exceptional. It is a statue of Moses and was meant to be part of the tomb of Pope Julius II but he isn’t actually buried here he is in St Peters - supposedly Michaelangelo took too long. Anyway it was amazing though I do think the hands are a little too big.
After looking around the church for a while we headed over to Mercati di Traiano Museo dei Fori Imperiali which is a museum around the remains of a site called Trajans Market which is a forum and market place. It is a huge area and sits right in the middle of Rome.
It was started around 100AD and, like most things in Rome, has had multiple functions over its 2000 year history.
It was an interesting place to visit and no where near as crowded as the Roman Forum which was just up the road.
It was starting to get really hot so we did what the Romans do and retired for a bit of a siesta.
Dinner was a fantastic little restaurant down near the Opera House.
Tomorrow we start the long journey home.Leggi altro
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- Giorno 31
- venerdì 21 giugno 2024
- ⛅ 30 °C
- Altitudine: 83 m
ItaliaPalazzo D'Accursio44°29’38” N 11°20’32” E
End of the fun!

Our holiday is now over and we are on our way home. We have a 2.5 hour stopover in Dubai so I am taking the opportunity to make this last entry.
A few thoughts on Italy:
- I really enjoyed every moment of the holiday. The purists might say group tours are not worth it but after walking past queues of people waiting to get into key sites, like the Vatican or St Marks in Venice, and the number of things we would not have done if we were on our own I am very pleased we did a tour.
- Italy has a LOT of churches and cathedrals and many of them have some very significant historical relic
- I now know a lot more about the Renaissance period in Italy
- I really liked the history, the people, the food, the ‘touch of chaos’ that seems to come with all things Italian, the relaxed attitude to alcohol, the stunning scenery, when you go into a bar and order a drink you get a bowl of chips or peanuts as well, and so much more.
- Some things I didn’t like were the traffic, the number of smokers, lack of public toilets and when you could find one you have to pay (though I did just step over the turnstiles on one occasion!), the big cities are very grotty
- It was very crowded but that’s what you get this time of year. Next time I would aim to travel in the shoulder season.
- I like the way you can walk around Italian cities and just come across ruins that are thousands of years old with huge historical significance and it is no big deal to the locals.
- I understand why some of their historical sites and buildings are a bit shabby and run down, there are just so many of them it is not possible to have them all pristine. In Australia the oldest building can only date from the late 1700s which is a brand new building to the Italians!
- The best gelato is in Italy. Sorry but it is true.
Attached is a selection of 20 of my favourite photos from the trip. Some have been in previous posts but this is a bit of a summary so here they are all together.
Thanks for reading and until next time …..
Ciao!
PS - the first photo is from Tracey and is taken in the Basilica of San Domenico in Bologna. It is a sheet of music written by Mozart. Google translate tells me the text says:
“During one of his trips to Italy, in 1770, Mozart had the opportunity to follow a short musical course with the maestro "Padre Giambattista Martini".
On October 6, on the occasion of the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary, Mozart performed on the organ of this chapel; he was just over fourteen.
On 9 October, at the headquarters of the Academy of Bologna, Mozart took the musical composition exam, but his work was a little lacking (or perhaps it was judged too modern) and maestro Martini intervened by making some corrections for the exam to be acceptable. Thus it was that, the following day, 10 October, the young Mozart was officially enrolled with the title of composer at the prestigious and century-old Philharmonic Academy of Bologna.
Below is the score written by Mozart on which the added notes can clearly be seen. Finally, note, in addition to the chant reported in Latin, the young man's signature - Mozart who Italianized his name: Amadeo Wolfgango.”Leggi altro