Rome has a dozen or more world-class museums, and even on this more or less extended visit, we saw only a few. The Capitoline Museum is one of the great ones, and after considerable heavy editing, I will limit myself to just two posts on it.
 |
Steps leading up to the Capitoline Hill, the Piazza Campidoglio; the great Capitoline Museum flanks the Piazza |
 |
Inside, the great bronze statue of Marcus Aurelius (and his horse); the largest equine statue of antiquity |
 |
Bust of an Amazon; winner of a scultpure contest in Ephesus |
 |
Beautiful marble caryatids |
 |
Tablets listing consuls (the CEOs of the Republic) over the centuries |
 |
The very, very famous 5th century BCE bronze she-wolf (the twins are a Renaissance addition) |
 |
Boy removing thorn from foot, also very famous |
 |
Another Artemis from Ephesus, but a particularly beautiful one |
 |
The Emperor Commodus dressed as (his hero) Hercules |
 |
Fragment of the immense bronze sculpture of Constantine that once stood in the Forum; a hand and two feet also survive |
 |
Interestingly, the Capitoline also has a fair number of paintings, and not Roman; this is the very famous and (to some) controversial self- portrait of of Velazquez, who worked in Rome for a time; I'm skipping the Caravaggio.... |