Rome
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Revision as of 10:48, 23 Jun 2005
- For other uses, see Rome (disambiguation).
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City motto: Senatus Populusque Romanus – SPQR (The Senate and the People of Rome) | |||||
Founded | 21 April753 BC mythical, 1st millennium BC | ||||
Region | Latium | ||||
Mayor | Walter Veltroni (Democratici di Sinistra) | ||||
Area - City Proper | 1290 km² | ||||
Population - City (2004) - Metropolitan - Density (city proper) | 2,546,807 almost 4,000,000 1,974/km² | ||||
Time zone | CET, UTC+1 | ||||
Latitude Longitude | 41°54' N 12°29' E | ||||
www.comune.roma.it |
Rome (Italian and Latin: Roma) is the capital city of Italy and of its Latium region. It is located on the lower Tiber river, near the Mediterranean Sea, at Template:Coor dm. The Vatican City, a sovereign enclave within Rome, is the seat of the Roman Catholic Church and the home of the Pope.
Rome is the largest city in Italy and its municipality is one of the largest in Europe with an area of 1290 square kilometers (it could easily encircle the nine largest italian cities: Milan, Naples, Turin, Bologna, Palermo Catania, Florence, Genoa and Bari). It has a population of 2,546,807 (2004) with almost 4 million living in the metropolitan area. The current mayor of Rome is Walter Veltroni.
With a GDP of € 75 billion (higher than New Zealand's and equivalent to Singapore's), in the year 2001 Rome's municipality produced 6,5% of Italy's total GDP, the highest rate among all of Italy's cities.
The city's history extends nearly 2,800 years, during which time it has been the seat of the ancient Rome (the Roman Kingdom, Roman Republic, Roman Empire), and later the Papal States, Kingdom of Italy and Italian Republic.
Contents |
1.2 The Roman Republic and Empire |
History
The origin of the city's name is unknown, with several theories already circulating in Antiquity; the least likely is derived from Greek Ρώμη meaning braveness, courage; more probably the connection is with a root *rum-, "teat", with possible reference to the totem wolf (Latin lupa, a word also meaning "prostitute") that adopted and suckled the cognately-named twins Romulus and Remus.
Early History
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Rome grew from pastoral settlements on the Palatine Hill and surrounding hills approximately eighteen miles from the Tyrrhenian Sea on the south side of the Tiber. Another of these hills, the Quirinal Hill, was probably an outpost for another Italic speaking people the Sabines. At this location the Tiber forms an S shaped curve that contains an island where the river can be forded. Because of the river and the ford, Rome was at a cross roads of traffic following the river valley and of traders traveling north and south on the west side of the peninsula.
Peoples of Early Italy
The settlements at Palatine and Quirinal were two of numerous Italic speaking communities which existed in Latium, a plain on the Italian peninsula, by the 1st millennium BC. Pieces of pottery have been discovered that indicate the area of Rome may have been inhabited as early as 1400 BC. The origins of the Italic peoples is not known, but they may have descended from Indo-Europeans who migrated from north of the Alps in the second half of the 2nd millennium BC or from a blending of these peoples with Mediterranean people, perhaps from North Africa. In the 8th century BC these Italic speakers — Latins (in the west), Sabines (in the upper valley of the Tiber), Umbrians (in the north-east), Samnites (in the South), Oscans and others — shared the penisula with two other major ethnic groups: the Etruscans, in the North and the Greeks in the south.
The Etruscans (Etrusci or Tusci in Latin) were settled north of Rome in Etruria (modern Tuscany). They deeply influenced Roman culture, as clearly showed by the Etruscan origin of some of the mythical Roman kings.
The Greeks had founded many colonies in Southern Italy (that the Romans later called Magna Graecia), such as Cumae, Naples and Taranto, as well as in the eastern two-thirds of Sicily, between 750 and 550 BC.
Etruscan Dominance
After 650 BC, the Etruscans became dominant in Italy and expanded into north-central Italy. They came to control Rome and perhaps all of Latium. Roman tradition claimed that Rome had been under the control of seven kings from 753 to 509 BC beginning with the mythic Romulus who along with his brother Remus were said to have founded the city of Rome. Two of the last three kings were said to be Etruscan. While the king list is of dubious historical value, it is known that Rome was under the influence of the Etruscans for about a century during this period. During this period a bridge called the Pons Sublicius was built to replace the Tiber ford.
Expanding further south, the Etruscans came into direct contact with the Greeks. After initial success in conflicts with the Greek colonists, Etruria went into a decline. Around 500 BC Rome gained independence from the Etruscans.
However, the Etruscans left a lasting influence on Rome. The Romans learned to build temples from them, and they introduced the worship of a triad of gods — Juno, Minerva, and Jupiter — from the Etruscan gods: Uni, Menrva, and Tinia. They transformed Rome from a pastoral community into a city. They also passed on elements of Greek culture they had adopted such as the Western version of the Greek alphabet.
Roman Expansion
After 500 BC, Rome joined with the Latin cities in defense against incursions by the Sabines. By 400 BC Etruscan power was limited to Etruria itself. Rome began to emerge as the dominant city in Latium, but in 387 BC was sacked by invaders from Gaul who had successfully invaded Etruria. After that Rome went on the offensive conquering the Etruscans and seizing terroritory from the Gauls in the north and pushing south against other Latins and the Samites in the South. By 290 BC over half of the Italian penisula was controlled by Rome. In the 3rd century BC the Greek poleis in the south were brought under Roman control as well.
The Roman Republic and Empire
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According to tradition, Rome became a republic in 509 BC. By the end of the Republic, the city of Rome had achieved a grandeur befitting the capital of an empire dominating the whole of the Mediterranean. This grandeur increased under Caesar Augustus and his successors: if anything, the Great Fire of Rome during the reign of Nero acted as an excuse for further development.
From the early 3rd century, matters changed. Rome formally remained capital of the empire but emperors spent less and less time there. In 330, Constantine established a second capital at Constantinople, and even the later western emperors ruled from Milan or Ravenna, not Rome. However, the Senate, while stripped of most of its political power, was still socially prestigious and the Empire's conversion to Christianity made the Bishop of Rome (later called the Pope) the senior religious figure in the Western Empire. Also, the empire was now more open to external attack - Rome's first city walls for several hundred years were built in about 270, and even these did not stop the city being sacked first by Alaric in 410 and then by Geiseric in 455.
For more details of the civilization, history, geographical expansion, and political system born in the ancient city of Rome, see Ancient Rome.
Rome under barbarian and Byzantine rule
The fall of the Western Roman Empire made little difference to Rome. Odoacer and then the Ostrogoths continued, like the last emperors, to rule Italy from Ravenna. Meanwhile, the Senate, even though long since stripped of wider powers, continued to administer Rome itself, and the Pope usually came from a senatorial family. This situation continued until the Eastern Roman Empire, under Justinian I, captured the city in 536.
In 546, the Ostrogoths under Totila recaptured and sacked the city. The Byzantine general Belisarius recaptured Rome but the Ostrogoths took it again in 549. Belisarius was replaced by Narses, who captured Rome from the Ostrogoths for good in 552.
Eastern Roman Emperor Justinian I (reigned 527–565) granted Rome subsidies for the maintenance of public buildings, aqueducts and bridges - though, being mostly drawn from an Italy impoverished by the recent wars, these were not always fully sufficient. He also styled himself the patron of its remaining scholars, orators, physicians and lawyers in the stated hope that in time more youths would seek for a better education. After the wars, the Senate was in theory restored, but under the supervision of a prefect and other officials appointed by and responsible to the Byzantine authorities in Ravenna.
However, the Pope was now one of the leading religious figures in the entire Byzantine Empire and effectively more powerful locally than either the remaining senators or local Byzantine officials. In practice, local power in Rome devolved to the Pope and, over the next few decades, both much of the remaining possessions of the senatorial aristocracy and the local Byzantine administration in Rome were absorbed by the Church.
The reign of Justinian's nephew and successor Justin II (reigned 565–578) would see the invasion of the Lombards under Alboin (568). By capturing the regions of Benevento, Lombardy, Piedmont, Spoleto and Tuscany, the invaders effectively restricted imperial authority to small islands of land surrounding a number of coastal cities, including Ravenna, Naples and Rome. The one inland city continuing under Byzantine control was Perugia, which provided a repeatedly threatened overland link between Rome and Ravenna. In 578 and again in 580, the Senate, in its last recorded acts, had to ask for the support of Tiberius II Constantine (reigned 578–582) against the approaching dukes, Faroald of Spoleto and Zotto of Benevento.
Maurice (reigned 582–602) added a new factor in the continuing conflict by creating an alliance with Childebert II of Austrasia (reigned 575–595). The armies of the Frankish King invaded the Lombard territories in 584, 585, 588 and 590. Rome had suffered badly from a disastrous flood of the Tiber in 589, followed by a plague in 590. The later is notable for the legend of the angel seen, while the newly elected Pope Gregory I (term 590‑604) was passing in procession by Hadrian's Tomb, to hover over the building and to sheathe his flaming sword as a sign that the pestilence was about to cease. But the city was safe from capture at least.
Agilulf, however, the new Lombard King (reigned 591 to c. 616), managed to secure peace with Childebert, reorganized his territories and resumed activities against both Naples and Rome by 592. With the Emperor preoccupied with wars in the eastern borders and the various succeeding Exarchs unable to secure Rome from invasion, Gregory took a personal initiative of starting negotiations for a peace treaty. It was completed during the autumn of 598 and was only after recognized by Maurice. But it would last till the end of his reign.
The position of the Patriarch of Rome was further strengthened under the usurper Phocas (reigned 602–610). Phocas recognized their primacy over that of the Patriarch of Constantinople and even decreed Pope Boniface III (607) to be "the head of all the Churches".
During the seventh century, an influx of both Byzantine officials and churchmen from elsewhere in the empire made both the local lay aristocracy and Church leadership largely Greek-speaking. However, the strong Byzantine cultural influence did not always lead to political harmony between Rome and Constantinople. In the controversy over Monothelitism, popes found themselves under severe pressure (sometimes amounting to physical force) when they failed to keep in step with Constantinople's shifting theological positions. In 653, Pope Martin I was deported to Constantinople and, after a show trial, exiled to the Crimea, where he died.
Then, in 663, Rome had its first imperial visit for two centuries, by Constans II - its worst disaster since the Gothic Wars when the emperor proceeded to strip Rome of metal, including from buildings and statues, to provide materials for armaments to use against the Saracens. However, for the next half-century, despite further tensions, Rome and the Papacy continued to prefer continued Byzantine rule - in part because the alternative was Lombard rule, and in part because Rome's food was largely coming from Papal estates elsewhere in the Empire, particularly Sicily.
However, in 727, Pope Gregory II refused to accept the decrees of Emperor Leo III, establishing iconoclasm. Leo proceeded, unsuccessfully, to impose iconoclasm on Rome by military force and then confiscated the Papal estates in Sicily and transferred areas previously ecclesiastically under the Pope but still under Byzantine control to the Patriarch of Constantinople. In effect, Rome had been expelled from the Byzantine Empire.
This left Rome reliant purely on its own local forces to protect itself against Lombard encroachment - sometimes now, indeed, encouraged by the Byzantines. Other protectors were now needed - and finally, in 753, Pope Stephen III induced Pepin III, king of the Franks, to attack the Lombards on the Papacy's behalf.
In the 9th century, Pope Leo IV commisioned the construction of a wall around an area on the opposite side of the Tiber from the seven hills of Rome, which has since been called the Leonine City.
Papal and Renaissance Rome
When Pepin III defeated the Lombards in 756, Rome became the capital city of the Papal States, a territorial entity at least nominally ruled by the Papacy. In practice, however, the government of the city was hotly contested between various factions of Roman nobility, the Pope, the Holy Roman Emperor, and occasional republican insurrections. After the suppression of the republic of 1434 (Gibbon's "last revolt of Rome" (http://www.ccel.org/g/gibbon/decline/volume2/chap70.htm#Revolt)), the Papacy folded the government of Rome into the ecclesiastical bureaucracy. During this period Rome became the worldwide centre of Christianity and increasingly developed a relevant political role that made it one of the most important towns of the Old Continent. In art, although Florence became the center of humanism and the Rinascimento (Renaissance), Rome was the center of baroque, and architecture deeply affected its central areas.
In the 16th century a central area was delimited around the Porticus Octaviae, for the creation of the famous Roman Ghetto, in which the city's Jews were forced to live.
Some of the most famous views of Rome in the 18th century were etched by Giovanni Battista Piranesi. His grand vision of classic Rome inspired many to visit the city and examine the ruins themselves.
Rome during the Italian unification
The rule of the Popes was interrupted by the short-lived Roman Republic (1798), which was built under the influence of the French Revolution.
Another Roman Republic arose in 1849, within the framework of revolutions of 1848. Two of the most influencing figures of the Italian unification, Giuseppe Mazzini and Giuseppe Garibaldi, fought for the short-lived republic.
The return of Pope Pius IX in Rome, with help of French troops, marked the exclusion of Rome from the unification process that embodied in the second Italian independence war and the Mille expedition, after which all the Italian peninsula, except Rome and Venetia, where unified under the House of Savoy.
In 1870, the Franco-Prussian War started, and French Emperor Napoleon III could no longer protect the Papal States. Soon after, the Italian government declared war against the Papal States. The Italian army entered Rome on September 20, after a cannonade of three hours, through Porta Pia. Rome and Latium were annexed to the Kingdom of Italy.
Initially the Italian government had offered to let Pope Pius IX keep the Leonine City, but the pope rejected the offer because acceptance would have been an implied endorsement of the legitimacy of the Italian kingdom's rule over his former domain. Pope Pius IX declared himself a prisoner in the Vatican, although he was not actually restrained from coming and going. Officially, the capital was not moved from Florence to Rome until early 1871.
The modern city
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The Roman urban form reflects the stratification of the epochs of its long history, with a wide historical center; this today contains many areas from Ancient Rome, very few areas from Quattrocento (mainly around piazza Farnese), and many churches and palaces from baroque times. The historical center is identified as within the limits of the ancient imperial walls. Some central areas were reorganised after the unification (1880–1910 - Roma Umbertina), and some important additions and adaptations made during the Fascist period, with the discussed creation of the Via dei Fori Imperiali and the founding of new quartieri (among which Eur, San Basilio, Garbatella, Cinecittà and, on the coast, the restructuring of Ostia) and the inclusion of bordering villages (Labaro, Osteria del Curato, Quarto Miglio, Capannelle, Pisana, Torrevecchia, Ottavia, Casalotti). These expansions were needed to face the huge increase of population due to the centralisation of the Italian state.
During the Second World War Rome suffered some heavy bombings (notably at San Lorenzo) and battles (Porta San Paolo, La Storta) and was considered an "open town" (as in the film by Roberto Rossellini). However, Rome was spared the wholesale destruction of cities such as Berlin or Warsaw. Rome fell to the Allies on June 4 1944. It was the first capital of an Axis nation to fall.
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After the war Rome continued to expand due to Italy's growing state administration and industry, with the creation of new quartieri and suburbs. The current official population stands at 2.5 million; during the business day workers increase this figure to over 3.5 million. This is a dramatic increase from previous figures, which were 138,000 in 1825, 244,000 in 1871, 692,000 in 1921, 1,600,000 in 1961.
Rome hosted the 1960 Summer Olympics, using many ancient sites such as the Villa Borghese and the Thermae of Caracalla as venues.
Many of the monuments of Rome were restored by the Italian state and by the Vatican for the 2000 Jubilee.
Being the capital city of Italy, Rome hosts all the principal institutions of the nation, like the Presidency of the Republic, the government (and its single Ministeri), the Parliament, the main judicial Courts, and the diplomatic representatives of all the countries for the states of Italy and the Vatican City (curiously, Rome also hosts, in the Italian part of its territory, the Embassy of Italy for the Vatican City, a unique case of an Embassy within the boundaries of its own country). Many international institutions are based in Rome, notably cultural and scientific ones, or humanitarian like the FAO.
Rome today is one of the most important tourist destinations of the world, due to its immense heritage of archaeological and artistic treasures, as well as for its unique traditions and the beauty of its views and its "villas" (parks). Among the most interesting resources, plenty of museums (Musei Capitolini, the Vatican Museums, Galleria Borghese, and a great many others), churches, historical buildings, the monuments and ruins such as the Roman Forum or the Catacombs.
Among its hundreds of churches, Rome contains the five Major Basilicas of the Catholic church: Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano (St. John Lateran, Rome's cathedral), Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano (St. Peter's Basilica), Basilica di San Paolo fuori le Mura (St. Paul Outside the Walls), Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore (St. Mary Major), and Basilica di San Lorenzo fuori le Mura (St. Lawrence Outside the Walls). The Bishop of Rome is the Pope, in his pastoral activity strictly applicable to the city, he is assisted by a vicar (usually a cardinal).
Economy
Today Rome has a dynamic and diversified economy, bent on innovation, technologies, communication and tertiary, which produces 6,5% of the national GDP (more than any other city in the country) and continues to grow at higher rates than that of the rest of Italy. Tourism is one of Rome's chief industries, but he city is also a centre of the banking, publishing, insurance, fashion, high tech, housing, cinematographic and aerospace industries.
Many international headquarters are located in Rome's principal business/office districts: the EUR (Esposizione Universale di Roma), which is as well one of the most exclusive residential area in south-west of Rome (with government ministries, conference and trade centers, parks, an artificial lake, sports venues, museums, gardened villas and apartment complexes); the Torrino (further south from the EUR), the Magliana (with the new Toyota Italia headquarter), the Parco de' Medici-Laurentina area, the so-called "Tiburtina-valley" along the ancient Via Tiburtina etc.
Transportation
Rome has an intercontinental airport formally named Leonardo Da Vinci International Airport - FCO, but more commonly known as Fiumicino and the Ciampino Airport, a joint civilian and military airport Southeast of the citycentre, handles mainly charter flights and regional European flights including some low-cost airlines.
A subway system operates in Rome called the "Metropolitana" or Rome Metro which was opened in 1955. There are 2 lines (A & B), a third (C) under construction and a fourth line (D) has been planned. Today's (2005) total length is 38 km. The two existing lines, A & B, only intersect at one point, Stazione Termini, the main train station in Rome.
The Rome Metro is part of an extensive transport network made of a tramway network, several suburban and urban lines in and around the city of Rome, plus an "express line" to Fiumicino Airport. Whereas most FR lines (Ferrovia Regionale) do provide mostly a suburban service, the Roma-Lido, the Roma-Pantano and the Roma-Nord lines offer a metro-like service.
Rome also has a comprehensive bus system. The web site of the public transportation company (ATAC) (http://infopoint.atac.roma.it) allows a route to be calculated using the buses and subways.
Chronic congestion caused by cars during the 1970s and 80s led to the banning of traffic in certain parts of the city.
Education
Amongst the prestigious educational establishments in Rome is the University of Rome La Sapienza (founded 1303), which is Europe’s biggest university with almost 150,000 students. The city is also home to three other public universities: Università degli studi di Roma “Tor Vergata”, more commonly called Roma 2, University of Roma Tre and the Istituto universitario di scienze motorie;
Several private universities are as well located in Rome, as:
- LUISS University (Libera università internazionale degli studi sociali), probably the most prestigious private university in Rome;
- Università Cattolica Del Sacro Cuore, a well renouned university in Italy;
- John Cabot University, a private American University;
- LUMSA University (Libera Universita Maria SS. Assunta);
- University of Malta, an International University;
- Leonardo da Vinci Libera Università di Roma;
- Libera Università Degli Studi S. Pio V;
- UPTER University;
- I.S.S.A.S. University.
Still located in Rome are the Accademia di Santa Cecilia - the world's oldest academy of music (founded 1584), St. John's University's Rome campus which is located at the Pontificio Oratorio San Pietro, several academies of fine arts, colleges of the church, medical and Health research instituts.
Monuments and sites
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- Amphitheatrum Castrense
- Appian way
- Aqueducts
- Ara Pacis
- Arch of Constantine
- Arch of Septimius Severus
- Arch of Titus
- Baths of Caracalla
- Baths of Diocletian
- Baths of Titus
- Capitoline Museums
- Castel Sant'Angelo
- Circus Flaminius
- Circus Maximus
- Cloaca Maxima
- Colosseum
- Curia
- Domus Aurea
- Esposizione Universale Roma
- Forum Boarium
- Galleria Doria Pamphilj
- Great Synagogue of Rome
- Janiculum
- La Bocca della Verità, (the mouth of truth)
- Palatino
- Palazzo Farnese
- Pantheon
- Piazza Campo dei Fiori
- Piazza Navona
- Pompey's Theater
- Pyramid of Cestius
- Roman Forum
- Spanish Steps
- Spanish Square
- Tabularium
- Tarpeian Rock
- Tiber Island
- Trajan's Column
- Trastevere
- Trevi Fountain
- Triton Fountain
- Villa Borghese
Rome continues to be the major educational center of Italy, with many major universities that offer degrees in all fields.
Houses of worship
Basilicas
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Pathriarcal basilicas
- Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano (Saint John Lateran)
- Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano (St. Peter's)
- Basilica di San Paolo fuori le Mura (Saint Paul outside the Walls)
- Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore (Saint Mary Major)
Paleochristian basilicas
- Basilica di Sant'Agnese fuori le Mura (Basilica of Saint Agnes Outside the Walls)
- Basilica di San Lorenzo fuori le Mura (Saint Lawrence outside the Walls)
- Basilica di Santa Maria in Trastevere (Basilica of Saint Mary in Trastevere)
Other basilicas
- Basilica di San Clemente (Basilica of Saint Clement)
- Basilica di Santa Croce in Gerusalemme (Basilica of the Holy Cross in Jerusalem)
- Basilica di San Marco (Basilica of Saint Mark)
- Basilica di Santa Maria degli Angeli e dei Martiri (Basilica of Saint Mary of the Angels)
- Basilica di Santa maria sopra Minerva (Basilica of Saint Mary over Minerva)
- Basilica di San Pietro in Vincoli (Basilica of Saint Peter in Vincoli)
Churches
Rome is home to over 900 churches. Here are a few of the more notable ones.
- Domine Quo Vadis?, also known as "Santa Maria in Palmis"
- Il Gesù
- Pantheon, also known as "Santa Maria ad Martyres"
- San Carlo al Corso
- San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane
- San Luigi dei Francesi
- Sant'Agnese in Agone (Saint Agnes in Agone)
- Sant'Andrea al Quirinale
- Sant'Andrea della Valle
- Sant'Ignazio
- Sant'Ivo alla Sapienza
- Santa Cecilia in Trastevere
- Santa Maria sopra Minerva
- Santa Maria del Popolo
- Santa Maria della Vittoria
- Santa Maria in Aracoeli
- Santa Sabina
Temples
Symbols and trivia
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Rome is commonly identified by several proper symbols, including the Colosseum, the she-wolf (Lupa capitolina), the imperial eagle, and the symbols of Christianity. The famous acronym SPQR recalls the ancient age and the unity between Roman Senate and Roman people.
Rome is called "L'Urbe" (The City), "Caput mundi" (head of the world), "Città Eterna" (eternal city), and "Limen Apostolorum" (the threshold of the apostles).
The town's colors are golden yellow and red (garnet): they stand, respectively, for christian and imperial dignities.
Rome has two holidays of its own: April 21 (the founding of Rome), and June 29 (the feast of its patron saints, Peter and Paul). Other locally important dates are December 8 (the Immaculate Conception) and January 6 (Epiphany).
The Grande Raccordo Anulare (commonly shortened "Il GRA"), the round motorway that encircles the city, is more than 80 km long.
Some proverbs about the Eternal City:
- When in Rome, do as the Romans do.
- All roads lead to Rome.
- Rome wasn't built in a day.
- Give unto Ceasar's, what is Caesar's
During its long history, ǏǏĚRome has always had a scarcity of native inhabitants, so by tradition a "true" Roman is one whose family has lived in Rome for no less than 7 generations: this is the original "Romano de Roma" (in Romanesco, the local dialect of Italian).
References
- Spielvogel, J. (1991) Western Civilization Volume I To 1715. West Publishing Company. ISBN 0-314-82893-1
- Chambers, M. et al. (1991) The Western Experience Volume I To 1715, Fifth Edition. McGraw-Hill, Inc. ISBN 0-07-010625-7
- Upshur, J. et al. (1991) World History, Combined Edition. West Publishing Company. ISBN 0-314-79265-1
- Webster, H. (1924) Early European History, Revised Edition. D. C. Heath and Company.
- Hughes, R (1951) The Making of Today's World. Allyn and Bacon.
- Tenney, M. (1967) Zondervan's Pictorial Bible Dictionary. Zondervan. ISBN 0-310-23560-X
External links
- Official Site of the City of Rome (http://www.comune.roma.it/cultura/)
- Activitaly, the interactive web guide of Rome (http://www.activitaly.it/inglese/home_ing.html)
- Activitaly rome map, the interactive map of Rome (http://www.activitaly.it/infobase/index.php?lang=en)
- Roma Sotterranea/Subterranean Rome (http://www.romasotterranea.it/)
- Rome Weather Forecast (http://www.asinah.org/weather/LIRA.html)
- La maquette de Rome (http://www.maquettes-historiques.net/page4.html)
- Virtual Roma, by Andrea Pollett (http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Arc/5319/eng.htm)
- Rome for Beginners (http://www.forbeginners.info/rome/)
Ancient Rome
- Rome in the footsteps of an XVIIIth Century traveller (http://www.romeartlover.it/Rome.htm)
- Gazetteer of Rome (http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Europe/Italy/Lazio/Roma/Rome/home.html) including the churches
- Encyclopædia Romana, by James Grout (http://itsa.ucsf.edu/~snlrc/encyclopaedia_romana/)
- "Forum Romanum", a ThinkQuest site (http://intranet.grundel.nl/thinkquest/introduction.html)
- "Forum Romanum" Project at VRoma (http://www.vroma.org/~forum/)
- Roma Antiqua — die Antiken Stätten Roms (http://www.roma-antiqua.de/pages/start/index.php), in German
- Roma Antica e Roma Moderna (http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/9259/roma_ant.htm), in Italian
Christian Rome
- Churches of Rome (http://roma.katolsk.no)
- Quattrocento (http://www.insecula.com/salle/EP0339.html/)
- The Hidden Churches of Rome (http://w1.131.comhem.se/~u13117202/index.htm)
Galleries
- Satellite image of Rome (http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov:81/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=15316) at NASA's Earth Observatory
- Ancient Rome, Images and Pictures (http://myweb.lmu.edu/fjust/Rome.htm)
- Fontanelle di Roma (http://map.cs.telespazio.it/fontane/index.html), including the aqueducts
- A virtual travel of Rome (http://www.compart-multimedia.com/virtuale/us/roma/movie.htm) pictures and virtual reality movies
- Free Rome Pictures (http://www.rome.info/pictures/)
- Rome Photo Gallery (http://sabin.ro/gallery/album412)
- Photos of Rome (http://digilander.libero.it/fotogian/roma.html)
- PhotoRoma (http://www.photoroma.com/)
- Vedute di Roma (http://www2.siba.fi/~kkoskim/rooma/pages/MAIN.HTM)
- Pictures of Rome (http://www.secretrome.com)bg:Рим
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