Three Weeks in Rome - Any suggestions...Please?
#1
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Three Weeks in Rome - Any suggestions...Please?
We'll be in Rome for three weeks from the end of November and I'm hoping to get some guidance from you all.
I'm very excited about the trip, we'll be staying in a flat near the Campo de Fiori - so we're in the thick of things. My question is what would you recommend for someone who has a little more time to explore the city and has visited before. Any neighborhoods you'd recommend to walk around, churches, food markets, smaller museums, anywhere that needs to be booked in advance, anything off the beaten path or things on the beaten path we may have overlooked?
We've been to Rome for shorter visited on several occasions over the last ten years but haven't had enough time to go much beyond the center of town. We've visited the main tourist haunts, taken the Scavi tour, visited the Villa Borghese, the synagogue and Jewish Museum as well as the Protestant Cemetery and Testaccio.
This time we're hoping to make it out to Tivoli, Ostia Antica and the Appian Way which have been on my list for years. I'm looking forward to exploring the ethnographic collections at the Vatican, as well as seeing something of the modern art scene in Rome and hopefully exploring some of the neighborhoods further out from the center. I'd be happy to hear about things you had on a list and didn't get around to.
This is part of a longer trip which I'm calling the "Mad Dash Across Too Much" and I'll be posting on my blog and here at Fodors. I haven't had a lot of time to think about the Rome portion so I'd greatly appreciate any insights and suggestions.
Thanks in advance.
I'm very excited about the trip, we'll be staying in a flat near the Campo de Fiori - so we're in the thick of things. My question is what would you recommend for someone who has a little more time to explore the city and has visited before. Any neighborhoods you'd recommend to walk around, churches, food markets, smaller museums, anywhere that needs to be booked in advance, anything off the beaten path or things on the beaten path we may have overlooked?
We've been to Rome for shorter visited on several occasions over the last ten years but haven't had enough time to go much beyond the center of town. We've visited the main tourist haunts, taken the Scavi tour, visited the Villa Borghese, the synagogue and Jewish Museum as well as the Protestant Cemetery and Testaccio.
This time we're hoping to make it out to Tivoli, Ostia Antica and the Appian Way which have been on my list for years. I'm looking forward to exploring the ethnographic collections at the Vatican, as well as seeing something of the modern art scene in Rome and hopefully exploring some of the neighborhoods further out from the center. I'd be happy to hear about things you had on a list and didn't get around to.
This is part of a longer trip which I'm calling the "Mad Dash Across Too Much" and I'll be posting on my blog and here at Fodors. I haven't had a lot of time to think about the Rome portion so I'd greatly appreciate any insights and suggestions.
Thanks in advance.
#3

Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 11,014
Likes: 3
On your way to the Via Appia Antica you may be able to stop off and visit the Tomb of the Scipios.
It's been closed for twenty years, but according to this article, it is now possible to arrange a Saturday morning visit.
http://intransit.blogs.nytimes.com/2...-in-rome/?_r=0
It's been closed for twenty years, but according to this article, it is now possible to arrange a Saturday morning visit.
http://intransit.blogs.nytimes.com/2...-in-rome/?_r=0
#4

Joined: Sep 2007
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There's also Mussolini's oddity, E.U.R., whcih contains a wonderful scale model of Imperial Rome. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EUR,_Rome
And, at the other end of the city, the Catacombs of Priscilla, which contain the earliest known depiction of the Madonna. http://www.catacombepriscilla.com/inglese/
And, at the other end of the city, the Catacombs of Priscilla, which contain the earliest known depiction of the Madonna. http://www.catacombepriscilla.com/inglese/
#5
Joined: Aug 2008
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one hour N of the city is La Posta Vecchia...one villa built upon another then renovated by J Paul Getty. He came upon ruins from the kitchen of the original villa and decided to keep them a part of his home! Now a hotel and restaurant, pricey, but worth looking at the property and having lunch. A very fun afternoon.
#6
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Thanks so much for the suggestions, this is exactly what I was looking for.
Bob -We were in Orvieto years ago but it would be fun to return.
Fra-Diavolo - I've see pictures of EUR but know nothing much more about it, I'll check this and the Tomb of the Scipios out before we go.
Laurela- My brother spent part of his honeymoon at La Posta Vecchia years ago!
Bob -We were in Orvieto years ago but it would be fun to return.
Fra-Diavolo - I've see pictures of EUR but know nothing much more about it, I'll check this and the Tomb of the Scipios out before we go.
Laurela- My brother spent part of his honeymoon at La Posta Vecchia years ago!
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Julie_Hurst
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