The Flavian Amphitheatre (The Colosseum)


The need to cope with the increasing amount of traffic coming from the north, along the Via Cassia and Via Flaminia consular roads, as a result of the increased number of cars circulating in Rome,
[...]Located in the northern quadrant of the city, Ponte Milvio is one of the most ancient and beautiful bridges in Rome, a meeting place for young Romans and tourists,
[...]The Bridge was erected at the point where the via Nomentana crossed the Aniene river at the foot of the Monte Sacro hill, a place
[...]Often called simply PASA from its acronym, the bridge that connects Piazza della Rovere, in the Rione Borgo
[...]Ponte Sant'Angelo was anciently called Pons Aelius, from the name of the emperor Aelius Hadrian who built it in 136 A.D.
A minimalist and contemporary design and a reticular structure recalling the nearby Gazo
[...]Built by Pope Sisto IV della Rovere (1471-1484) for the Jubilee of 1475, the suggestive and romantic Ponte Sisto has a postcard background from which you can see t
[...]Located immediately downstream from Sant’Angelo Bridge, Ponte Vittorio Emanuele II connects Cors
[...]Located close by Porta San Giovanni, it was initially a small door with a single archway between two quadrangular towers.
Among the most solemn architectures of the Roman Empire, we cannot fail to mention Porta Maggiore (or Porta Prenestina), erected in 52 AD by Emperor Claudius at the crossroads of the two roads lead
[...]Porta Metronia era un varco secondario che consentiva l’accesso al Celio.
Located at the beginning of today's Via della Lungara, the street that connects the Rione Trastevere
[...]Porta Tiburtina or Porta San Lorenzo is a gateway in the Aurelian Walls of Rome, through which the Via Tiburtina exi
[...]The complex of the Portico d'Ottavia is the only one preserved of the large porticoes that limited the square of the "Circo Flaminio" on the northern side.
Built in the second half of the 1st century AD, the Ramp connected the Roman Forum, the
[...]A halo of mystery cloaks one of the most legendary places in Rome, the Tarpeian Rock - from the Latin Rupes Tarpeia or Saxum Tarpeium - the rocky
[...]Visit the archaeological area below the Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano, where the r
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