London, Paris, Florence and Rome 10-Days the Perfect Balance of Learning, Fun and Culture

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

London, Paris, Florence and Rome 10-Days the Perfect Balance of Learning, Fun and Culture London, Paris, Florence and Rome 10-Days The Perfect Balance of Learning, Fun and Culture Start at the biggest city in Western Europe, London, founded by the Romans nearly 200 years ago. Ride the London Eye to see the city from the sky. Walk along popular streets to Piccadilly Circus, Covent Garden and through the middle of Leicester Square, where there’s a statue of William Shakespeare. Explore London’s cosmopolitan neighborhoods, beginning at the multicultural and largest market in London, Camden Market. Continue on to Borough Market, set at the crossing point of the River Thames, the London Bridge. Visit the Portobello area, which was won by the British during the War of Jenkins Ear, and is now the location of the largest antiques market in the world, the Portobello Road Market. Watch the ceremonial Changing of the Guard, where the New Guard marches in, accompanied by a band of the finest military musicians, taking over the responsibility of guarding Buckingham Palace from the Old Guard. Considered one of the most attractive cities, Paris is also admired as a place of education and intellect. Make the trip to the Eiffel Tower for an iconic photo. Tour the City of Light to see the monuments, including the Tuileries Gardens and Les Invalides. Drive along one of the most famous avenues in the world, Champs-Élysées, all the way to the Arc de Triomphe. See the Notre-Dame Cathedral, whose construction began in 1163 and has continued through multiple re-creations to this day. Let the literary culture and educational heritage settle in on a walk through Latin Quarter, named after the college that taught solely in Latin, the Sorbonne. Discover over 26 centuries of collected art in the Louvre Museum, including Leonardo da Vinci’s painting of the Mona Lisa, treasures of French kings and Egyptian antiques. Learn why Florence is known for its historical and architectural marvels on this tour. At the Basilica of Santa Croce lies the tombs of prominent Florentine scholars and artists. Find the Fountain of Neptune, among other prominent statues, in the Piazza della Signoria. View the Duomo, best-known for its mosaics and dome design. See the doors that Michelangelo called the Gates of Paradise, sculpted from bronze and depicting scenes from the Bible. Much of the architecture here took years to complete. Giotto’s Bell Tower alone was the work of three artists over 25 years. Florence is also the home of Dante, who is considered the father of the Italian language. Some of the historical landmarks in Florence span back to Roman times. One in particular is the Ponte Vecchio bridge over the Arno River. Perhaps the most important takeaways on this trip to Florence is that gelato was created here. Travel back in time on a trip to Rome, first founded in 753 BC. Rome has been the center of multiple religious traditions, starting with temples to the gods to its current foothold as the center of Christianity. On foot, see the Pantheon, which began as a temple to the gods and is now dedicated to the Christian church – the architecture still influences our buildings today. Stop to admire the three famous fountains of the Piazza Navona and climb the Spanish Steps. Take a break from all this ancient history for a blind gelato tasting contest. Explore the glory of Vatican City, taking in the masterpieces of Michelangelo, one crowning the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel and more in the various Vatican Museums. Notice how dramatically things can change at St. Peter’s Basilica, starting as a place where Christians were part of the entertainment in Nero’s games and now dedicated to the sanctity of Christianity. See the Colosseum, an amphitheater built to hold 50,000 spectators. View the setting of public meetings, gladiator combats and ceremonies at Forum Romanum. Before departing, be sure to toss a coin into the Trevi Fountain, as it is widely believed that doing so ensures a return trip to Rome. Empowering Connections Our experience and expertise developing high-quality programs connects students with exceptional educational opportunities that spark a lifetime of discovery. Housing Customized Education For the program, students stay in a local hotel Our program is customized to introduce students (quad occupancy). Student safety and comfort to entrepreneurship and business, immerse is our top priority and we’ve taken responsible them in English language practice, local outdoor measures to ensure their protection and wellness activities and all the city has to offer. throughout their stay. Our staff is always available to offer service and support. Signature Activities Technology We’ve curated activities that promote learning and Our revolutionary software makes study tours student engagement with the city. Students not safer than ever, while enhancing the student only get the chance to experience the big-name experience and connecting everyone involved. attractions, but they also get to explore the places and activities loved by locals. World-Class Connections Our connections with top U.S. universities and companies ensures that students have access to exceptional instruction, superior campus resources, expert guest speakers and exclusive on-site workshops. Daily Itinerary (10 Days) DAY 1 OVERNIGHT FLIGHT TO LONDON DAY 6 PARIS AND FLORENCE – MYSTERIOUS SMILE Take off from home, flying through the night to London. Discover endless works of art, from the original Mona Lisa to • In Transit ancient Egyptian artifacts, at the world’s largest art museum, the Louvre. Have some free time in Paris, before traveling to DAY 2 LONDON – COSMOPOLITAN Florence by night train. Upon arrival in London, get familiar with the city on a walking • Louvre Visit tour. Explore places like Piccadilly Circus, Covent Garden • Paris Free Time and Leicester Square on an orientation walking tour. Go up on the London Eye, high above the River Thames, for a bird’s- • Night Train to Florence eye view of the city’s architecture. DAY 7 FLORENCE – HISTORICAL ARCHITECTURE • Arrive in London Explore Florence on a guided sightseeing tour of to learn • London Walking Orientation Tour the Franciscan history of the Basilica of Santa Croce, the • London Eye political center of Piazza della Signoria, the breathtaking Duomo cathedral, the bronze-sculpted Gates of Paradise, DAY 3 LONDON – LANDMARKS AND NEIGHBORHOODS the magnificent architecture of Giotto’s Bell Tower, the On a guided tour of London, see Buckingham Palace, the iconography of Dante’s House and the medieval Ponte Houses of Parliament, Big Ben Westminster Abbey, St. Paul’s Vecchio bridge. Afterward, enjoy some free time in Florence. Cathedral and Tower Bridge. Set off on a fun exploration of • Florence Guided Sightseeing London’s Markets, from Borough Market for fresh produce • Florence Free Time to Camden Market, the largest market in London, as well as Portobello Road Market, the largest antiques market in DAY 8 ROME – ANCIENT EMPIRE the world. Among the 13th to 20th century paintings at the Travel to the Eternal City of Rome. Guess the flavors and find National Gallery, see the current exhibitions and find the art a favorite in a gelato tasting contest in Rome. Get familiar of Vincent van Gogh, Claude Monet and Leonardo da Vinci. with Rome on an evening orientation walk to the preserved • Guided Sightseeing of London Roman temple, the Pantheon, the elegant Piazza Navona and • London Markets: Borough, Camden and Portobello climb the Spanish Steps. Toss a coin into the Trevi Fountain in hopes to return to Rome. • The National Gallery • Travel to Rome DAY 4 LONDON AND PARIS – MARCHING ON • Blind Gelato Tasting Contest Watch the Changing of the Guard ceremony at Buckingham • Rome Evening Orientation Walk Palace. Dive under the English Channel on a Eurostar Train trip from London to Paris. DAY 9 ROME – TREASURES OF ROME • Buckingham Palace Changing of the Guard Learn about Rome’s most iconic sights on a guided walking • Eurostar Train to Paris via the Chunnel tour with Whisper headsets. Discover the glorious, historical collections in the Vatican Museums, Michelangelo’s DAY 5 PARIS – CITY OF LIGHT masterpieces in the Sistine Chapel, the holy shrine of St. Explore the landmarks on a guided tour, starting at the iconic Peter’s Basilica, the giant amphitheatre of the Colosseum, Eiffel Tower for a morning photo op. Continue on to see the cultural hub of Piazza Venezia and the surviving the military museums of Les Invalides, the lovely Tuileries structures of the Forum Romanum. Share a Trattoria dinner, Garden, drive along the Champs-Élysées and finish up at the enjoying traditional Italian cuisine. famous Arc de Triomphe. Stop by Notre-Dame Cathedral • Vatican Museums and Sistine Chapel to discover its history, dating back to the 12th-century. On • St. Peter’s Basilica a Latin Quarter tour, walk along the Seine River, down the Boulevard Saint-Michel, over to see the oldest tree in Paris • Colosseum at Square René Viviani and end at the historical Sorbonne • Piazza Venezia university. • Forum Romanum • Paris Guided Sightseeing • Farewell Trattoria Dinner • Notre-Dame Cathedral DAY 10 DEPART ROME AND JOURNEY HOME • Latin Quarter Walking Tour Leave The Eternal City, flying home to share stories from the experience with family and friends. • In Transit Program Details Program Overview Go back in time on this educational tour of London, Paris, Florence and Rome. Discover London, from high in the sky on the London Eye and walking through Piccadilly Circus, Covent Garden and Leicester Square. Explore London’s neighborhoods, hopping from Camden Market to Borough’s Market and over to Portobello Market. Watch the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace. Visit Paris for a photo at the Eiffel Tower and see the Mona Lisa at the Louvre. Travel along the Champs-Élysées to the Arc de Triomphe.
Recommended publications
  • 1-Day Rome City Guide a Preplanned Step-By-Step Time Line and City Guide for Rome
    1 day 1-day Rome City Guide A preplanned step-by-step time line and city guide for Rome. Follow it and get the best of the city. 1-day Rome City Guide 2 © PromptGuides.com 1-day Rome City Guide Overview of Day 1 LEAVE HOTEL Tested and recommended hotels in Rome > Take Metro Line A to Ottaviano San Pietro station 09:00-10:10 St. Peter's Basilica Largest Christian Page 5 church in the world 10:10-10:40 Piazza di San Pietro One of the best known Page 5 squares in the world Take Metro Line A from Ottaviano San Pietro station to Termini station (Direction: Anagnina) Change to Metro Line B from Termini station to Colosseo station (Direction: Laurentina) - 30’ in all 11:10-12:40 Colosseum Iconic symbol of Page 6 Imperial Rome Take a walk to Arch of Constantine - 5’ 12:45-12:55 Arch of Constantine Majestic monument Page 6 Lunch time Take a walk to Piazza Venezia 14:30-14:50 Piazza Venezia Focal point of modern Page 7 Rome Take a walk to the Pantheon - 15’ 15:05-15:35 Pantheon The world's largest Page 7 unreinforced concrete Take a walk to Piazza Navona - 10’ dome 15:45-16:15 Piazza Navona One of the most Page 7 beautiful squares in Take a walk to Trevi Fountain - 25’ Rome 16:40-17:10 Trevi Fountain One of the most familiar Page 8 sights of Rome Take a walk to Spanish Steps - 20’ 17:30-18:00 Spanish Steps Rome's most beloved Page 8 Rococo monument END OF DAY 1 © PromptGuides.com 3 1-day Rome City Guide Overview of Day 1 4 © PromptGuides.com 1-day Rome City Guide Attraction Details 09:00-10:10 St.
    [Show full text]
  • Zaha Hadid the MAXXI Museum of 21St Century Arts, Rome David
    Auditorium (2002) which has become a centre for music in Rome, with its three beetle-shaped concert halls arranged around an open-air amphitheatre. The other major architectural intervention in Rome is Richard Meier’s controversial Ara Pacis Museum (2006). So the MAXXI is the third post-Jubilee Year building to make it to construction. Quite an event. They are the first new public works in Rome for over sixty years. “The Eternal City” is the eternal nightmare for anyone trying to build in Rome, unless you are Mussolini, tearing up the housing between Colosseum and Piazza Venezia to make space for your triumphalist military parades, or flattening the huddle of medieval dwellings around St. Peter’s to make way for a road to symbolise reconciliation between Catholicism and Fascism and spoil Bernini’s Baroque surprise: the embrace of his twin colonnades suddenly opening out from crowded buildings. Building anything in Rome is a challenge because the city is a palimpsest of overlapping cities, like an ancient manuscript with layers and layers of inscriptions scratched off its skin, written over or crowded with marginal notes made by different scribes in different centuries. Just imagine: baroque façades, Egyptian obelisks, Renaissance domes, early Christian mosaics, post-unification palazzi and the chaos of noisy traffic everywhere. If you have been to the basilica of San Clemente you will have seen a twelfth-century church built over a fourth-century basilica, above a Roman domus and Zaha Hadid Mythraic temple at street level, ending abruptly at The MAXXI Museum of 21st Century the edge of the excavation where, many feet below Arts, Rome ground level, a wall of rubble at the end of a barrel vault denies the view of the rest of the second David Brancaleone century city.
    [Show full text]
  • Rome - Location Guide
    ROME - LOCATION GUIDE Exceptional Tours Expertly Delivered Our location guide offers you information on the range of visits available in Rome. All visits are selected with your subject and the curriculum in mind, along with the most popular choices for sightseeing, culture and leisure in the area. The information in your location guide has been provided by our partners in Rome who have expert on the ground knowledge of the area, combined with advice from education professionals so that the visits and information recommended are the most relevant to meet your learning objectives. Making Life Easier for You This location guide is not a catalogue of opening times. Our Tour Experts will design your itinerary with opening times and location in mind so that you can really maximise your time on tour. Our location guides are designed to give you the information that you really need, including what are the highlights of the visit, location, suitability and educational resources. We’ll give you top tips like when is the best time to go, dress code and extra local knowledge. Peace of Mind So that you don’t need to carry additional money around with you we will state in your initial quote letter, which visits are included within your inclusive tour price and if there is anything that can’t be pre-paid we will advise you of the entrance fees so that you know how much money to take along. You also have the added reassurance that, WST is a member of the STF and our featured visits are all covered as part of our externally verified Safety Management System.
    [Show full text]
  • Xxv Edizione Della Maratona Di Roma
    XXV EDIZIONE DELLA MARATONA DI ROMA Domenica 7 aprile in occasione della 25esima edizione della Maratona di Roma il trasporto pubblico subirà variazioni di servizio. Ecco la guida al trasporto: COME MUOVERSI IL GIORNO DELLA GARA: nella giornata di domenica la rete di trasporto pubblico centrale e semicentrale sarà modificata per lasciare spazio ai maratoneti. Occorrerà fare attenzione, quindi, al percorso della propria linea di bus. I particolari sono in questa guida PER SPOSTARSI IN CITTA’ METROPOLITANE E FERROVIE: il servizio della metropolitana e delle ferrovie non subirà variazioni, per muoversi nelle zone interessate dalla maratona, quindi, converrà usare le linee su ferro. La stazione Colosseo, resterà chiusa da inizio servizio e sino a cessate esigenze, per raggiungere la zona di via dei Fori Imperiali, sono utilizzabili anche le stazioni Cavour o Circo Massimo. SITUAZIONE DEL TRASPORTO PUBBLICO IN TEMPO REALE: per tutta la durata della manifestazione, la situazione in tempo reale del trasporto pubblico sarà disponibile sul sito www.atac.roma.it – sezione tempo reale - e sul profilo Twitter di Atac spa @infoatac, accessibile all’indirizzo www.twitter.com/infoatac e, su WhatsApp inviando una richiesta di informazioni al numero 335.1990679 WhatsApp 335.1990679 www.atac.roma.it @infoatac - www.twitter.com/infoatac XXV EDIZIONE DELLA MARATONA DI ROMA GUIDA AL TRASPORTO IN OCCASIONE DELLA 25ESIMA EDIZIONE DELL MARATONA DI ROMA DOMENICA 7 APRILE 2019 LINEA MODIFICA DELL’OPERATIVO DI SERVIZIO Dalle 14.00 alle 17.15 Direzione Termini:
    [Show full text]
  • The Power of Images in the Age of Mussolini
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2013 The Power of Images in the Age of Mussolini Valentina Follo University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the History Commons, and the History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Recommended Citation Follo, Valentina, "The Power of Images in the Age of Mussolini" (2013). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 858. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/858 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/858 For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Power of Images in the Age of Mussolini Abstract The year 1937 marked the bimillenary of the birth of Augustus. With characteristic pomp and vigor, Benito Mussolini undertook numerous initiatives keyed to the occasion, including the opening of the Mostra Augustea della Romanità , the restoration of the Ara Pacis , and the reconstruction of Piazza Augusto Imperatore. New excavation campaigns were inaugurated at Augustan sites throughout the peninsula, while the state issued a series of commemorative stamps and medallions focused on ancient Rome. In the same year, Mussolini inaugurated an impressive square named Forum Imperii, situated within the Foro Mussolini - known today as the Foro Italico, in celebration of the first anniversary of his Ethiopian conquest. The Forum Imperii's decorative program included large-scale black and white figural mosaics flanked by rows of marble blocks; each of these featured inscriptions boasting about key events in the regime's history. This work examines the iconography of the Forum Imperii's mosaic decorative program and situates these visual statements into a broader discourse that encompasses the panorama of images that circulated in abundance throughout Italy and its colonies.
    [Show full text]
  • Elenco Stazionamenti Taxi Del Comune Di Roma
    Elenco stazionamenti taxi del Comune di Roma Gli stazionamenti sottolineati sono dotati di colonnina di chiamata taxi. Per chiamare la colonnina comporre lo 06.06.09 e seguire le istruzioni automatiche. MUNICIPIO ZONA ATTIVA DI STAZIONAMENTO UBICAZIONE 1 PIAZZA BARBERINI DA CIV. 40 A 46 (solo riserva) 1 PIAZZA BARBERINI CIV. 23 - FRONTE HOTEL BERNINI BRISTOL 1 PIAZZA DELLA MADONNA DI LORETO FRONTE MILITE IGNOTO - NN. 17/26 1 VIA CAVOUR FR. CIV. 213M - ENTRATA HOTEL PALATINO 1 PIAZZA INDIPENDENZA CIVICO 24 1 PIAZZA DI SPAGNA CIVICO 52-54 1 PIAZZA DI SPAGNA CIVICO 93 1 VIA LIBERIANA CIVICO 18 1 PIAZZA SAN CARLO AL CORSO ANG. VIA DEL GROTTINO - FRONTE HOTEL PLAZA 1 PIAZZA ALBANIA CIVICO 35 1 VIA CAMPANIA ANG. VIA VENETO 1 VIA LUDOVISI 49 FRONTE HOTEL EDEN 1 LARGO CARLO GOLDONI 43 ANGOLO VIA TOMACELLI 1 LARGO DEGLI SCHIAVONI ANGOLO VIA TOMACELLI 1 PIAZZA DELLA REPUBBLICA CIVICO 10 1 VIA NAZIONALE CIVICO 194 - FRONTE PALAZZO DELLE ESPOSIZIONI 1 VIA MARSALA CIVICO 42. - ENTRATA STAZIONE 1 VIA GIOLITTI FRONTE CIV. 10 - ENTRATA STAZIONE 1 PIAZZA DI PORTA SAN GIOVANNI FR. BASILICA - ADIAC. CAPOLINEA AUTOBUS 1 PIAZZA DEL COLOSSEO STAZIONE METRO - ANG. VIA CLIVIO DI ACILIO 1 PIAZZA VENEZIA CIVICO 13/15 1 PIAZZA DELLE CINQUE LUNE CIVICO 109 - ANG. PIAZZA TOR SANGUIGNA 1 PIAZZA DELLA ROTONDA VIA DELLA ROTONDA CIV. 21/26 1 PIAZZA DELLA MINERVA PIAZZA DELLA MINERVA 1 PIAZZA PASQUALE PAOLI CIVICO 1 - 3 1 LARGO CHIGI CIVICO 12 1 PIAZZA DI PORTA MAGGIORE FRONTE VIA DI PORTA MAGGIORE 1 PIAZZA DELLA TRINITA' DE' MONTI CIVICO 18 - FRONTE HOTEL HASSLER 1 PIAZZA DEI CINQUECENTO FRONTE STAZIONE TERMINI 1 PIAZZA DEL POPOLO TRA CIV.
    [Show full text]
  • Qt7hq5t8mm.Pdf
    UC Berkeley Room One Thousand Title Water's Pilgrimage in Rome Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7hq5t8mm Journal Room One Thousand, 3(3) ISSN 2328-4161 Author Rinne, Katherine Publication Date 2015 Peer reviewed eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Katherine Rinne Illustration by Rebecca Sunter Water’s Pilgrimage in Rome “If I were called in To construct a religion I should make use of water.” From Philip Larkin, “Water,” 1964 Rome is one of the world’s most hallowed pilgrimage destinations. Each year, the Eternal City’s numinous qualities draw millions of devout Christians to undertake a pilgrimage there just as they have for nearly two millennia. Visiting the most venerable sites, culminating with St. Peter’s, the Mother Church of Catholicism, the processional journey often reinvigorates faith among believers. It is a cleansing experience for them, a reflective pause in their daily lives and yearly routines. Millions more arrive in Rome with more secular agendas. With equal zeal they set out on touristic, educational, gastronomic, and retail pilgrimages. Indeed, when in Rome, I dedicate at least a full and fervent day to “La Sacra Giornata di Acquistare le Scarpe,” the holy day of shoe shopping, when I visit each of my favorite stores like so many shrines along a sacred way. Although shoes are crucial to our narrative and to the completion of any pilgrimage conducted on Opposite: The Trevi Fountain, 2007. Photo by David Iliff; License: CC-BY-SA 3.0. 27 Katherine Rinne foot, our interest in this essay lies elsewhere, in rededicating Rome’s vital role as a city of reflective pilgrimage by divining water’s hidden course beneath our feet (in shoes, old or new) as it flows out to public fountains in an otherwise parched city.
    [Show full text]
  • AAR Magazine
    AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME MAGAZINE SPRING 2018 SPRING 2018 Welcome to the Spring 2018 issue UP FRONT IN CLOSING of AAR Magazine. 2 33 LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT DONORS This issue highlights recent work and collabora- tions by our Rome Prize winners and Italian Fellows. 4 36 Because this year was the tenth anniversary of the FAR AFIELD WHEN IN ROME Scharoun Ensemble Berlin in Rome, we reflect on Checking in with past Fellows and Residents Three Fellows share their favorite places in Rome how the concert series began. The spring issue also anticipates a solo show of new work by Yto Barrada, 6 the Roy Lichtenstein Artist in Residence from last INTRODUCING fall, which—along with the Patricia H. Labalme The 2018–2019 Rome Prize winners Friends of the Library Lecture by Mary Roberts in and Italian Fellows March and a conference on Islamic art and architec- ture in May—are the culminating events of East and 10 West, the Academy’s thematic series of events for FROM THE ARCHIVES 2017–18. Ten years of Scharoun Ensemble Berlin Finally, we are excited to announce the 2018–19 Rome Prize winners and Italian Fellows! 11 IN RESIDENCE Vi diamo il benvenuto all’edizione Spotlighting recent Residents primaverile 2018 dell’AAR Magazine. 15 CONVERSATIONS/ CONVERSAZIONI Questo numero dà spazio alle opere e alle collabora- This season’s discussions in Rome and the US zioni recenti dei vincitori del Rome Prize e dei nostri Italian Fellows. Poiché quest’anno ricorre il decimo anniversario dello Scharoun Ensemble Berlin a Roma, ripercorriamo la storia della serie di concerti.
    [Show full text]
  • France & Spain
    France & Italy April 12, 2018 - April 21, 2018 Included: Round-trip airfare, all transportation, sightseeing tours and site visits, all hotels with private bathroom, breakfast and dinner daily, on-tour tipping, full-time multi-lingual tour director. All- inclusive insurance available. Explorica.com/Hellman-1308 TOUR ITINERARY: Day 6 Cote d'Azur--Florence › Travel to Florence Day 1 Start Tour › Baptistery visit & see the Leaning Tower of Pisa Day 2 Bonjour Paris › Italian Pizza dinner › Meet your Tour Director and check into hotel › Paris City Walk: Ile de la Cité, Notre Dame Day 7 Florence Landmarks Cathedral visit, Ile St. Louis, Latin Quarter visit › Florence Guided Walking Sightseeing Tour › Louvre visit with Whisper headsets: Palazzo Visit the Louvre! › Dinner in Latin Quarter Vecchio, Piazza della Signoria, Chiesa di Santa Croce, Ponte Vecchio, Duomo visit, Leather Day 3 Paris Landmarks workshop, Gates of Paradise, Giotto’s Bell › Paris Guided Sightseeing Tour: Arc de Tower, Dante's house Triomphe, Champs-Élysées, Eiffel Tower, Champ › Siena Guided Excursion: Piazza del de Mars, École Militaire, Les Campo, Palazzo Pubblico, Duomo, Church of St Invalides, Conciergerie, Tuileries, Place Catherine, Fortezza Medicea Vendôme, Opera House › Arc de Triomphe ascent Day 8 Florence--Rome › Seine River Sightseeing Cruise › Travel to Rome › St. Francis of Assisi Basilica visit Enjoy Italian Cuisine! Day 4 Paris--Nice › Rome City Walk: Spanish Steps, Trevi › Travel to Nice on the TGV (Europe’s Fountain, Pantheon, Piazza Navona fastest train) › Capitoline Museum visit Day 5 Monaco, Eze & Nice › Monaco & Eze Tour Director-Led Day 9 Rome Landmarks Sightseeing Tour: Prince’s Palace, Parfumerie › Rome Guided Walking Sightseeing Tour visit in Eze with Whisper headsets: Vatican Museums & › Nice Tour Director-Led Sightseeing Tour: Sistine Chapel visit, St.
    [Show full text]
  • The Colosseum As an Enduring Icon of Rome: a Comparison of the Reception of the Colosseum and the Circus Maximus
    The Colosseum as an Enduring Icon of Rome: A Comparison of the Reception of the Colosseum and the Circus Maximus. “While stands the Coliseum, Rome shall stand; When falls the Coliseum, Rome shall fall; And when Rome falls - the World.”1 The preceding quote by Lord Byron is just one example of how the Colosseum and its spectacles have captivated people for centuries. However, before the Colosseum was constructed, the Circus Maximus served as Rome’s premier entertainment venue. The Circus was home to gladiator matches, animal hunts, and more in addition to the chariot races. When the Colosseum was completed in 80 CE, it became the new center of ancient Roman amusement. In the modern day, thousands of tourists each year visit the ruins of the Colosseum, while the Circus Maximus serves as an open field for joggers, bikers, and other recreational purposes, and is not necessarily an essential stop for tourists. The ancient Circus does not draw nearly the same crowds that the Colosseum does. Through an analysis of the sources, there are several explanations as to why the Colosseum remains a popular icon of Rome while the Circus Maximus has been neglected by many people, despite it being older than and just as popular as the Colosseum in ancient times. Historiography Early scholarship on the Colosseum and other amphitheaters focused on them as sites of death and immorality. Katherine Welch sites L. Friedländer as one who adopted such a view, 1 George Gordon Byron, “Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, canto IV, st. 145,” in The Selected Poetry of Lord Byron, edited by Leslie A.
    [Show full text]
  • Concierge Tips -Things to Do in Rome
    Concierge Tips -Things to do in Rome Rome’s Keyhole A pleasant surprise Villa del Priorato dei Cavalieri di Malta Chiostro del Bramante A courtyard and museum Arco della Pace, 5 Tel: 06.68809035 Opening hours : Mon - Fri: 10.00 a.m. - 8.00 p.m., Sat - Sun: 10.00 a.m. - 9.00 p.m. The Catacombs of Rome Sacred burial grounds beneath the city Via Appia Antica, 110/126 Tel: 06 513 0151 Bocca della verità Opening hours : Tue - Sun: 8.30 a.m. - noon, The mouth of truth Tue-Sun: 2.30 p.m. - 5.00 p.m. Via della Greca, 4 Opening hours : Mon - Sun: 10.00 a.m. - 6.00 p.m. Bioparco di Roma Gianicolo Rome’s zoo Puppet show & breathtaking panorama Piazzale del Giardino Zoologico 1 Piazzale Giuseppe Garibaldi Tel: +39 06 36 08 211 Opening hours : Sun: 11.00 a.m. - 4.00 p.m. Opening hours : Mon - Sun: 9.30 a.m. - 5.00 p.m. Rome Marriott Park Hotel Via Colonnello Tommaso Masala, 54 • 00148 Rome Tel: +39-06-658821 • Email: [email protected] Concierge Tips -Things to do in Rome Circolo degli artisti Top concert spot, meeting place & more Via Casilina Vecchia, 42; tel: 0670305684 Opening hours: Mon - Thu: 8.00 p.m. - 1.00 a.m.; Fr i- Sat: 8.00 - 3.00 a.m.; Sun: 8.00 -0 1.00 a.m. Ponte Milvio Market Antique market on the river Piazzale di Ponte Milvio Opening hours : Sun: 9.00 a.m. -7.00 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • The Conference Guide
    CONFERENCE GUIDE Conference Location: The Church Palace Hotel Address: Via Aurelia 481, Rome, Italy Tel: +39 06 66 00 11 Fax: +39 06 6623138 URL: http://www.thechurchresort.com/thechurchpalace/en/ How to get to Rome By Air Rome airport Fiumicino or Leonardo da Vinci airport of Rome is Italy’s first airport and Europe’s sixth where traffic volume is concerned. It lies 16 miles southwest of Rome and is linked to the city by train and by road. The ride by train lasts approximately 30 minutes and goes as far as the central railway station of Rome, Termini. The airport incorporates 3 passenger stations and offers services of a great variety, such as convention facilities, conference rooms, banks, coffee shops, restaurants and shops selling both local Italian products and international goods. Rome International Airport (ROM) Address: Via dell' Aeroporto di Fiumicino, 320, 00054 Fiumicino RM, Italy Country: Italy Telephone: +39 06 65951 Source: http://www.rome-airport.info/ Visa: Before you travel to Italy, please check your visa requirements and make sure you have a valid visa if needed. Holders of non-standard passports and travel documents may also have different entry requirements: please check your visa and passport requirements at https://italy.visahq.com/ By Ferry • Grimaldi Lines provides ferry service from Civitavecchia to Barcelona, Tunis, Toulon (France), Porto-Vecchio (Corsica). Many ferries run as much as 4h late causing problems with onward connections such as the train to Rome. The last one leaves Civitavecchia at midnight and can leave you stranded overnight. Official site of Grimaldi Lines: http://www.grimaldi-ferries.com/en • Moby Linesprovides service to/from Olbia, Sardinia Official site of Moby Lines: http://www.mobylines.com/ By car Driving to Rome is quite easy; as they say, all roads lead to Rome.
    [Show full text]