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MERCURIUS RELOCATIONS: For your relocation needs
ROMAN RENTALS:Apartments in Rome
Tourist Information Service: 0682059127
Tourist Offices in Rome
Tourist info about the City and ongoing events can be found at the little
green kiosks all over the city staffed by friendly and helpful people.
Leonardo
di Vinci Airport ( International arrivals - Terminal B )
Largo Goldoni ( Via del Corso ) Tel # 06 - 6813 6061
Piazza San Giovanni in Laterano Tel # 06-77203535
Via Nazionale ( Palazzo delle Esposizioni ) Tel # 06-47824525
Piazza Pia ( Castel Sant'Angelo ) Tel # 06-68809707
Piazza Sonnino ( Trastevere ) Tel - 06 - 58333457
Pizza dei Cinquecento ( Termini Railway Station ) Tel # 06 - 47825194
Via Marco Minghetti ( Trevi Fountain ) Tel # 06 - 6782988
You can
also check our web page 'Events
in Rome'
The Cruiser Bike Tour
Rome in audioguide Mp3 for RENT
Cultural Tourism Card
Catacombs of Rome
CONTEXT TRAVEL
ATAC the Rome's public bus company provides various tour of the key sites of historic interest in central Rome and Appia Antica Area:

110 DOUBLE DECKER BUSES: Time 2 hrs. Audioguide in english language.
LINEA 110 Stop & go formula
ARCHEOBUS with professional tourist guide. Possible to get on and off along this journey


Boat on The Tiber

The "Risto-tram" consists of renovated
vintage streetcars converted into elegant tram restaurants offering a comfortable way to travel through the historical
centre of Rome. These unique trams are the only ones of their kind in Italy. They can be rented for
your exclusive use for events such as, surprise parties, corporate events, weddings, birthdays, christenings etc.

They can arrange prepared meals for up to 30 people.
Prices:
TRAM 28 pax: Euro 390.00 TRAM
38 pax 468.00 Catering not included.
Elena
Doubinina Russo/Italiano Polina72@libero.it
Uw Nederlands Stadsgids: Kees van Duin
Guided tours
Tel. 06 - 48976161 / 06 - 48907913
Green Line Guided Tours
Marc Manser- Tours of the Vatican
Tel: 06/59 60 15 46

AREOPHILE Height: 150 meters. 15 minutes flight [max for 30 people]. Price per ticket:
14 euro, reduced 10 euro, children:
[0-5] 3 euro, [6-12] 6 euro, for groups [min.ten people] 10 euro per reservation but not on saturday and sunday. Location:
Villa Borghese, Galoppatoio, Metro Station Spagna Line A exit Via Veneto. From 9.30 to sunset. Info: 06.32111511

The ArcheoBus: a brightly painted spiffy modern fifteen passenger
model, with air conditioning, and an enthusiastic and knowledgeable young guide keeping up a constant bilingual patter about
dozens of archeological sites along the Via Appia from Rome's Piazza Venezia to the Villa de Quintili -- and it only costs
about $7.50. There are fourteen stops along the route where you can get off and explore tombs, catacombs, a well preserved
double aqueduct, and, of course, the Quintili digs. You can then re-board the bus at the same stop or at any of the other
stops along the route. Some of the route is along the Via Appia Antica and some is on the Via Appia Pignatelli, a parallel
road built in the late 17th century by Pope Innocent 12 Pignatelli. In addition to the starting point at Piazza Venezia, three
more stops are inside Rome's Aurelian walls (the Bocca della Verità in the Foro Boario area, the Circus Maximus, and the baths
of Carracalla), and one is right where Via Appia crosses the walls at Porta San Sebastiano, where you can visit the Museum
of the Aurelian Walls. The first stop outside the walls is at the headquarters of the Via Appia Regional Park, where guide
materials are available and where you can rent bicycles. A bike is also a good way to explore roads off the route of the Archeobus
and especially up the Caffarella Valley which is also the next stop of the Archeobus. The Caffarella Valley, where, according
to legend, the ancient battle of Lake Regillus against the Latin League was won for the Romans by the divine intervention
of Castor and Pollux. It is now the site of another regional archeological park that is contiguous with the Via Appia Park.
There are two sets of catacombs on the route, those of St. Callixtus (Callisto) and of St. Sebastian (Sebastiano), and a third
set, those of Domitilla, is within walking distance. You should plan your trip to arrive at those stops in mid-morning if
you want to maximize your chances of entry -- both close for long lunches of the sacristans and porters who man the churches
guarding the entrances of the catacombs. The St. Callixtus catacombs are closed on Wednesdays, the St. Sebastian Catacombs
are closed on Sundays, and the Domitilla Catacombs are closed on Tuesdays. All have entrance fees (about $4.50), as do some
other sites on the Archeobus route, and no entrance fees are included in the price of the bus ticket. There are good restaurants
right at the St. Sebastian Archeobus stop, and the most popular one is the Cecilia Metella Restaurant. On weekends you can't
get a table at lunch time without a reservation (Tel. 06/511 02 13 or 06/513 67 43). From the restaurant you can see the monumental
Tomb of Caecila Metella, which is the next stop for the Archeobus. Partially renovated and cleaned, the Tomb has recently
been reopened, and, with it, parts of the castle that Pope Boniface 8 built in and around it at the beginning of the 14th
century so that his kin, the Caetani family, could collect tolls on the busy road. Secure metal stairways and access routes
have replaced the dangerous scrambles that once greeted visitors. There are a small shop and restrooms at the site. The Tomb
is closed on Mondays. Nearby is the site of the imperial residence and the circus (horse-race track) of Maxentius, the emperor
who was defeated and dispossessed by Constantine. The remaining stops are along the next few kilometers of the Via Appia and
are placed to allow visits to all the major sights. In some places it's almost impossible to resist the urge to get off the
bus and walk along ancient roads and through archeological sites to meet the Archeobus at another stop. That's, in fact, the
best option for the Villa dei Qinitili, which was one of the biggest rural estates ever built around Rome, and it's certainly
the biggest archeological attraction on the Archeobus route. The Quintili brothers, who built it were heirs, to old patrician
and new merchant wealth, and they displayed it a bit too ostentatiously during the reign of Emperor Commodus -- he of the
"Gladiator" movie. Their huge villa aroused the Emperor's avarice, and the brothers found themselves accused of plotting against
the throne. The charge was plausible, although there is no record of what evidence might have been produced. Both were executed.
Commodus moved into their country home shortly thereafter and decorated it even more sumptuously with loot from the homes
of other "conspirators". There are two Archeobus stops on opposite sides of the Villa, so you can disembark, walk through
the site, and re-board on the other side. The Villa also has a shop and restrooms. It's closed on Mondays. The aqueduct is
actually a side trip for the Archeobus: it turns off the Via Appia Pignatelli, goes out to the aqueduct, and returns along
the same route. There are long sections of arches still standing. Many folks carry lunch baskets to this location. If you
want to picnic on weekends, arrive early, before all the choice spots are filled. The arches carried pipes on two levels,
which are still clearly visible. The lower tube that it carried was the Aqua Claudia, which, when it was opened, provided
about two thirds (209,000 cubic meters per day) of all of Rome's water, and the upper pipe was the Anio Novus, or "New " Anio
aqueduct. Both Aqueducts were started by Caligula (Gaius) in 36 AD and finished by Claudius in 50 AD. There are hundreds of
additional ancient tombs, monuments and villas along the Via Appia and many of them are on or near the route of the Archeobus.
The on-board guide will give a quick run-through, identifying many of them enroute. The small tour brochure lists about 50
sites and the tour guide mentions even more. Your best bet is to board the Archeobus at Piazza Venezia. Although theoretically
you can board the bus at any stop and buy a ticket on board, if the bus is already full you will be out of luck. The green
ticket kiosk at Piazza Venezia is small and not particularly easy to spot: it's in front of Palazzo Venezia on Via S. Marco
just where that street runs into Piazza Venezia, on the side that faces the Victor Emmanuel Monument. It's a good idea to
call at least one day in advance for reservations, especially on weekends -- we saw people being turned away. 06 469 523 43
rings in the kiosk during tour hours. Buses leave from Piazza Venezia every hour starting at 10 AM and going until 4 PM. Our
bus left a few minutes late, but don't count on it. Summer hours start an hour earlier, and the last bus leaves Piazza Venezia
at 7 PM. The round trip takes about two hours if you stay with the same bus all the way, but, if you get off the bus, you
can spend many more hours on the Via Appia. In fact, it's clearly impossible to see everything on the itinerary in one day.
EUR
Tour A new and exciting tourist route in Rome which purports
to introduce the more modern face of the city: the EUR district: a unique example of large-scale urban development with monumental
architecture, furniture,design, and works of art. Sat h15; sun h11 and h16. €8, reduced €6
e-mail to: suerte.booking@email.it
WEEKENDS AWAY at THE COOKING SCHOOL
AROUND THE LATIUM
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