Elite Romans had been moving to the countryside since the first century BCE, building villas and plantations and such ("Rancho Deluxe") to get away from the hustle and bustle of the big cities. Hadrian would count as an elite Roman: emperor early in the second century, presiding over the empire's greatest extent, a traveler, a general, a scholar, a lover of all things Greek. We have bumped into him at his Wall in Britain, his birthplace at Italica, near Seville, at battle sites in Romania, at his tunnel (diverting a river) near Antioch, all over Greece, and at his Forum and Column and Pantheon in Rome. He was the third of the Five Good Emperors, and, next to Augustus, I'd say, best of them all. Anyhow, his villa, near Tivoli, is certainly the biggest of them all, a city in itself, with a palace, guest quarters, three Baths, both Latin and Greek libraries, huge warehouses and administrator/servant/soldier quarters, and some of the most striking water features of the ancient world. I'll just post some of the better pix, without comment.
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Hadrian's Villa
We drove about 25 miles east of Rome, up slightly into the Appenine foothills, to the ancient town of Tivoli, one of the summer playgrounds of "elite" Romans of the classical era. The Piazza del Cimiterio in Tivoli afforded us free if occasionally noisy parking for three nights while we explored the area's major sights--Tivoli itself, Hadrian's Villa, and the Renaissance Villa d'Este.
Elite Romans had been moving to the countryside since the first century BCE, building villas and plantations and such ("Rancho Deluxe") to get away from the hustle and bustle of the big cities. Hadrian would count as an elite Roman: emperor early in the second century, presiding over the empire's greatest extent, a traveler, a general, a scholar, a lover of all things Greek. We have bumped into him at his Wall in Britain, his birthplace at Italica, near Seville, at battle sites in Romania, at his tunnel (diverting a river) near Antioch, all over Greece, and at his Forum and Column and Pantheon in Rome. He was the third of the Five Good Emperors, and, next to Augustus, I'd say, best of them all. Anyhow, his villa, near Tivoli, is certainly the biggest of them all, a city in itself, with a palace, guest quarters, three Baths, both Latin and Greek libraries, huge warehouses and administrator/servant/soldier quarters, and some of the most striking water features of the ancient world. I'll just post some of the better pix, without comment.
Elite Romans had been moving to the countryside since the first century BCE, building villas and plantations and such ("Rancho Deluxe") to get away from the hustle and bustle of the big cities. Hadrian would count as an elite Roman: emperor early in the second century, presiding over the empire's greatest extent, a traveler, a general, a scholar, a lover of all things Greek. We have bumped into him at his Wall in Britain, his birthplace at Italica, near Seville, at battle sites in Romania, at his tunnel (diverting a river) near Antioch, all over Greece, and at his Forum and Column and Pantheon in Rome. He was the third of the Five Good Emperors, and, next to Augustus, I'd say, best of them all. Anyhow, his villa, near Tivoli, is certainly the biggest of them all, a city in itself, with a palace, guest quarters, three Baths, both Latin and Greek libraries, huge warehouses and administrator/servant/soldier quarters, and some of the most striking water features of the ancient world. I'll just post some of the better pix, without comment.
Monday, May 23, 2011
Ciao!
We reluctantly left Rome on Monday the 16th of May. Even after nearly four weeks for me, three for Vicki, and seven for the Grey Wanderer, it was hard to leave. Our camping situation at the Prato Smeralda, while not ideal, was at least secure and very cheap, and the commute into the Eternal City was a snap. And then there is Rome, with all its sights, major and minor, food and drink, and just the thrill of being in one of the world's oldest and still most vibrant cities. Our leaving was at least helped along by the decision to keep the Grey Wanderer in Europe, rather than shipping it back to the States this summer. We like our mode of travel very much and want to be able to continue it in Europe in future years.
Our place at Prato Smeraldo, camper-stop, -storage, -service
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Giovanni's roses
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We'll be back!
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Porta Portese
For our last day in Rome we ventured out to the Sunday flea market at Porta Portese, near Trastevere, a walk along the Tiber, and associated sights.
The Tiber, the Island, and the 2,000 year-old Roman bridge |
Sometimes the sights are just other people, other tourists, including a young couple carrying a blow-up kangaroo down the Via Lungoterre Anguillara |
They're from Australia (duh) and the roo's name is Skip; "he goes everywhere with us" |
The Native American shoppe |
The vege-matic shoppe; actually, multi-bladed scissors |
The Americano license plate shoppe |
And the army surplus shoppe |
Vicki by the Piramide |
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Capitoline Museum II
Reliefs like this beautiful example have provided historians with many clues about Roman history, architecture, et cetera |
Over-sized Mars, a very popular god with the Romans |
The dying Gaul; a favorite subject in Hellenistic and Roman art; but always executed with empathy |
Muy importante: the Lex de Imperio Vespasiani, a hugely important tablet, historically, that set forth the roles, duties, and rights of the emperor |
A beautiful marble Amazon (sans Kindle) |
Incredible things done with marble |
Pink marble Dionysus |
In the Hall of the Philosophers (all bearded, of course) |
Capitoline Venus |
In the Tabularium, the archives of ancient Rome |
And, after a modest dinner in the area, back to the Metro Colosseo |
Capitoline Museum I
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 |
More Caravaggio (and a Random Rafael)
Vicki has really gotten into Caravaggio, so we are seeking his paintings out at every opportunity. I can't remember all the churches (I am relatively sure they are all of the St. Mary of the Whatever franchise) and all the paintings' names, but here are a few more...
Adoration of the Persons with Sticks and Big
Butt |
On a column in the nave of this St. Mary
church, an apparently random Rafael, his
Elijah, as I recall; thank goodness they left it
as it was |
Caravaggio's Matthew and the Angel; Guido
Reni's still the best Matthew, if you ask me |
More, Or Less, St. Peter's
So it was Saturday and we figured the great church might be free of Masses for a while...think again, Pagan Breath...
The Beatification stuff was still everywhere; note use of the
Piazza for a tour bus parking lot
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We fell in line right behind a group of nuns and friends from
Croatia, singing and chanting all the way; I was actually moved
(slightly) by their evident emotion
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Looking across the great Piazza
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We did get to see the new JP2 Beato shrine
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Up closer
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On our way out we visited the JP2 exposition, which I found
quite informative and enjoyable
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A collection of JP2's many books; I guess he didn't have much
of a problem with agents or editors or publishers
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And so we left, but not without promenading
one more time through Bernini's four-deep
colonnade, one of the grandest of architectual
wonders
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