A Week in Rome – Wrap-up-the-Last

It’s hard to leave Rome – the art, the weird feral cats, the history under every step, the unexpected gelato shops. But finally I had to go home. Some final images to keep Rome close in my mind: the Forum, the hotel, the Sistine Chapel.

Click here for previous chapters of “A Week in Rome.”

View of columns in the Roman Forum.

We had, at our little hotel, the most lovely bathroom.

Bathroom with red and white checkered marble floors, a gleaming bidet, and a marble lined tub at my hotel in Rome.

I mean, really. How can you not feel like a princess sitting on the can with floors like that. Fantastic. Our hotel was the Royal Court, near Termini Station but a couple of blocks away from the noise. It was actually very convenient. Travel guides tell you to avoid the area, and though I generally agree, this hotel was nice, and the convenience to the underused Metro system as well as all trains you could ever need can’t be underestimated.

TIP: A lot of tourists never use the Metro. It’s very crowded, and covered in graffitti, so I imagine that turns some people off. But it is extremely cheap (16 Euros for a one week unlimited pass), goes to the general vicinity of almost everything, and runs every couple of minutes making it incredibly convenient. If we had used cabs for all the things we used the Metro for in that week we would have spent a minimum of a hundred Euros. We didn’t use a cab once. If you are able bodied, the Metro is the way to go. Make sure you get your Metro Pass from one of the many news vendors up top before you go down, and get it validated in one of the machines on the back of a public bus (works on all the bus and tram lines too–and they’re very clean and convenient) or by a Metro employee at one of the entrances.

Don’t worry if the train is too crowded for you to get on–just wait for the next one, which comes along in less than 3 minutes. And there are worse things than cramming yourself in a subway car full of handsome Italian men. Trust me.  Rick Steves, who wrote the excellent guide to Rome we followed throughout our trip, doesn’t recommend the Metro as much as I do, and I think that’s an error on his part.

One last thing on the Metro: I don’t have any pictures. Why? Because it’s a lousy idea to whip out an expensive camera on the Rome metro. Keep your belongings close. We had no problems, but hey, why take a chance.

Aaah, let’s hop back to the Vatican for a moment, eh? Let’s try the Pope’s private chapel, otherwise known as the Sistine Chapel.

Looking straight up at the Sistine chapel, where over two dozen brightly colored panels depict various biblical scenes. No pictures are allowed in the Sistine Chapel, but if you keep the flash off, there’s really no harm, and the minders can’t possibly keep track of you in the inevitable crowd, can they?
Besides, I asked God if he objected, and he didn’t say anything, so that means it was ok.
I’ve gotta take another look at that Vatican Museum ceiling:

Gold-leaf ceiling at the Vatican Museum, Vatican City.

Back in St. Peter’s, anotherlook at the alter, with the shining white dove stained glass peeking through from the back:

Altar at St. Peter's Cathedral, Vatican City. A blinding white dove in stained glass emerges from the focal center of the altar.
Over at the Collosseum (get off the Metro at Collosseo station, step onto the street, gawk) they had a nice exhibit of various disembodied heads:

Fragment of a Roman pottery head. Colosseum, Rome.  Curly Roman hair and a neutral expression. Male face.

Evenings in Campo di Fiori were lovely.

Flower seller at night in Campo di Fiori, Rome.  Light reflects off of wet cobblestones in front of the lighted flower vendor booth. Emperor Nero’s palace, known as Domus Aurea (near the Collosseum), is extraordinarily preserved underground. Here’s the remains of a painted ceiling that Nero would have walked under back in the day.

Ceiling fragment at Nero's Palace, Rome. Fresco shows a soldier in uniform with Roman headdress.

And so there it is. A week in Rome. Cost of the trip was less than $1200 per person, all told, including a day trip to Florence on the high speed train. Oh yeah, let’s remember Florence, briefly, and our fist peek at that sunset from Il Duomo…

Sunset from top of Il Duomo. Florence, Italy. Haze hangs in the air.

The city exceeded our expectations by a mile. We expected crowds and a bit of the grittiness of a big city. We got (with the exception of the Metro) uncrowded (go in November! Trust me!), spotlessly clean in the tourist areas, and visibly prosperous, especially when compared to most American cities. We found the people abundantly friendly, and never ran out of things to do. In fact, we would need another entire week to catch up on everything we missed. Italy is the world’s greatest tourist destination, and deservedly so. The food at cheap, family-owned restaurants was so good we could afford to eat out, exchange rate or no. We didn’t buy many souveniers, but there were plenty to be had if we had wanted. The shopping is fantastic. What an amazing place. I will be back. Absolutely. Goodbye Rome, I miss you.

View of columns by the Colosseum at sunset.  Night sky is deep grey-blue and clear, with columns lit from the front while traffic blurs by.

Table of Contents
The Colosseum
Palatine Hill
The Forum
The Pantheon
The Vatican
St. Peter in Chains
Imperial Lion
St. Peter’s Square and Basilica
Atop St. Peter’s Dome
Castel Sant’ Angelo (Pope hideaway on the Tiber River)
Day Trip to Florence
Castel Sant’ Angelo, Continued
St. Paul’s Outside the Walls (Vatican church in Rome’s Suburbs)
Great Fountains of Rome
Musei Capitolini (Capitoline Museum): Romulus and Remus and Random Body Parts
Victor Emmanuel Monument (VE Monument)
National Museum of Rome: A Treasure Vault and Lots of Heads
Wrap-Up-The-First – Summary of the Trip
Wrap-Up-The-Last – Final Summary of the Trip

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