The view from the top.
We then walked over to Trevi Fountain, another famous landmark.
There were a ton of people surrounding the fountain. We walked by on another day and it was even more crowded!
The legend is that if you throw a coin into Trevi Fountain, you are promised to return to Italy. Let's hope that's true!
I don't know what this building is, but I'm sure it looked impressive in its day. Apparently after the fall of the Roman Empire, people would reuse marble from old buildings, which is why many of them fell into disrepair, and why this building is filled with pock marks.
The building below is the Pantheon, once a pagan temple and now a Catholic church.
The artist Raphael is buried here. Below is his tomb.
A few more photos from our walk:
Day 5 was probably my favorite day. The weather was the best that we had all week, and I got to leisurely explore the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill.
Palatine Hill was where the elite had their "country" villas. There were also some shops, I believe.
The above is a remnant of an aqueduct.
I believe this was a building full of shops.
There was hardly anyone else around, and it felt so peaceful walking amongst the ruins in this lush setting. It was as if the ruins were growing out of the landscape.
Seeing the once-gleaming buildings now crumbling and overgrown with plants, I can understand how it inspired the Romantics of the 19th century.
The building below was part of Caesar Augustus's palace complex.
At the bottom of Palatine Hill is the Roman Forum. This was the gathering place of ancient Rome, filled with government buildings, temples, and markets.
There are massive columns just lying on the ground. Some you can even sit on, amazingly!
This is the remnant of the Temple of Vesta, tended by the famous Vestal Virgins.
And this is where their house was, surrounded by statues of some of the more notable Vestal Virgins.
The area below that is covered by the shed roof is the site of Julius Caesar's funeral pyre.
And this is the mound where his body was. People now throw coins on it and sometimes leave flowers.
The scale of everything is so impressive.
The following photos were taken on different days, hence the change in lighting.
At the edge of the Forum is Mamertine Prison, which is purportedly where Paul was imprisoned. It's amazing to think that the city that once imprisoned him for preaching the gospel is now the center of the Catholic Church!
That's it for now...much more to come!












































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