Between galleries, churches, historic   palazzi, ruins, castles, and tombs, the Eternal City has many more monuments and   museums than the average visitor has time to see. The expression "Roma, non   basta una vita" ("Rome, a lifetime is not enough") pretty much sums it up, as   even the most dedicated of native Romans is unlikely to see it all. The   following list is by no means complete, but we trust it will keep you busy while   you're here:
	» Monuments
	Domus Aurea
		The ruins of   Emperor Nero's legendary "Golden House," which in its day took up one-third of   the city of Rome, were finally reopened to the public in 1999 after 25 years of   restoration work. Although only 20 percent of the palace survives (and what's   left is completely underground), the Domus Aurea remains one of the most unique   and impressive sites in Rome. Nero may have been demented, but he sure knew   about the good life! Via Labicana 136. Tel. 06 369967700. Mon-Sun 9am-7:45pm.   Booking essential. € 5.16 + € 1.03 booking fee. Metro Line B: Colosseo, or bus   87 or J4. Tickets can be purchased in advance at the Centro servizi per   L'Archeologia on Via G. Amendola 2 (open Mon-Sat 9am-1pm). 
	Colosseum
		The granddaddy of all Roman monuments, this   arena known to the ancients as the "Flavian Amphitheater" hosted 450 years of   gladiatorial contests and wild beast hunts... "games," as they were called in   antiquity. You can get a pretty good sense of the Colosseum just by walking   around the outside, but going inside will give you a better idea of the seating   areas, the structures beneath the arena floor, and the general enormity of the   building. Piazza del Colosseo. 9am-sunset (until 4pm Oct-Mar). € 6.71. Metro   Line B: Colosseo, or bus 87 or J4. 
	Palatine
		This is where Rome began, back in 753 BC when   Romulus killed Remus. The Palatine Hill was the best real estate in ancient Rome   (the emperors chose to live there, after all), and it's still one of the best   locations today. The visit here is part ruin-exploration, part nature hike, so   take a book or a picnic, relax in the sun or shade, and enjoy one of the most   serene and splendid views over Rome. Entrances at Piazza di S. Maria Nova (Arch   of Titus) and Via di S. Gregorio 30. Mon-Sun 9am-sunset (until 4pm Nov-Mar). €   6.20; includes admission to Palatine Museum, closes 80 minutes earlier than   Palatine). Metro Line B: Colosseo, or bus 87 or J4, or a 5-minute walk from   Piazza Venezia. 
	Roman   Forum
		This was the downtown area of the ancient city, where you could   cross paths with Cicero or Caesar himself on their way to the political,   religious, and commercial buildings which are still visible here today, 2000   years later, in various states of preservation. Very evocative of the power of   Rome in her Golden Age. Entrances at Largo Romolo e Remo 5-6, Piazza S. Maria   Nova (Arch of Titus), and Via del Monte Tarpeo (Capitoline Hill). Open daily   9am-sunset (until 4pm Nov-Mar). Admission free. Metro Line B: Colosseo, or bus   87 or J4, or a 5-minute walk from Piazza Venezia. 
	Baths of   Caracalla
		The best preserved of the imperial bath complexes. Follow the   path of the ancient bathers from the changing rooms to the caldarium,   tepidarium, and frigidarium, then out to the exercise areas and libraries. The   massive brick walls and mosaics still in existence help you imagine what a grand   experience bathing in Rome would have been, even though the water hasn't been   running here for about 1500 years. Via delle Terme di Caracalla. Tues-Sun   9am-sunset (until 4pm Nov-Mar); Mon 9am-2pm. € 4.13. Metro Line B: Circo Massimo   or bus 628; or J3. 
	Pantheon
		Very dear to the hearts of this guide-book's   authors, the Pantheon is by far the best place in the city to experience the   true splendor, harmony, and elegance of Roman architecture, inside and out. This   2nd century AD pagan temple to all the gods was converted into a church in 608   AD and today, nearly 1900 years after its construction, is still almost   completely intact. From outside in the piazza, feel the solidity and permanence   of the rectangular portico; inside, marvel at the vault of the hemispherical   concrete dome, pierced by a 9m oculus open to the sky, and take in all the   colors of the marbles that line the walls. Piazza della Rotonda. Open Mon-Sat   8:30am-6:30pm; Sun & holidays 8:30am-1pm. Free. Bus 40 Express, 64, 492, or   62 to Largo Argentina. 
	Spanish   Steps
		This monument hardly needs an introduction as it enjoys a great   reputation as the place to go in Rome to meet those handsome young Italian men.   Foreign women can almost certainly expect to be offered a rose and/or marriage   proposal here. Go at sunset when the light is divine and most of the bus tour   groups have left. Metro Line A: Spagna. 
	Trevi   Fountain
		A delightfully extravagant Rococo creation with travertine   palm trees, tritons, seahorses, and Neptune himself. Throw one coin over your   shoulder for a quick return to Rome, two for a fling with an Italian, and three   to marry an Italian! Best experienced in the evening. Metro Line A: Spagna, or   bus 62 or 492 to Via del Tritone. 
	Mouth of   Truth
		The so-called "Bocca della Verita'," in the portico of the church   of S. Maria in Cosmedin. Put your hand in the mouth of this ancient sewer   cover--legend has it that liars' hands will be bitten off. Good touristy photo   opportunity. Piazza Bocca della Veritˆ. 9am-1pm; 2:30pm-6pm daily. Bus 170 to   Via del Teatro di Marcello (or any bus to Piazza Venezia and walk 5 minutes). 
	Trajan's   Markets and Forum
		This area immediately east of Piazza Venezia   and the Capitoline Hill was developed in the 2nd century AD and included a   massive basilica, Greek and Latin libraries, a temple, Trajan's column, and a   sophisticated marketplace. The column, widely regarded as one of the greatest   works of Roman art, and the markets, known to archaeologists as the world's   first shopping mall, and in excellent states of preservation today. You can get   a free view of the complex from Via Alessandrina (off Via dei Fori Imperiali),   but there is an admission fee to get right down in the ruins and wander around   the markets. Entrance on Via IV Novembre. Tel. 06 6790048. Tues-Sun 9am-6:30pm   (until 4pm Nov-Mar); Mon closed. € 6.20.
	» Museums and Galleries 
	ACEA   (Montemartini) Art Center
		Important pieces from the Capitoline   collection of ancient sculpture displayed among the machinery of an old power   plant. "Venus in the Boiler Room" should give you an idea of the exhibition   here. Via Ostiense 106 - Tel. 06 5748030. Tues-Sun 9:30am-7pm. € 4.13; reduced €   2.58. Bus 23 or Metro B: Piramide. 
	Antiquarium Comunale
		Archaeological   excavations throughout Rome in the 19th century uncovered all kinds of   artifacts, from funerary marbles to everyday objects like plumbing components,   now on display in the "City Antiquarium." Via del Parco del Celio, 22 (near   Colosseum). Tues-Sat 9am-7pm; Sun 9am-1pm; Mon closed. € 1.94. Metro Line B:   Colosseo. Closed for restoration at time of printing; scheduled to reopen by   January, 2001. 
	Borghese   Gallery
		A wonderfully intimate collection of some of the most   important Renaissance and Baroque paintings in the world, including works by   Raphael, Titian, and Caravaggio, plus amazing Baroque and Neo-Classical   sculptures by Bernini and Canova. P.le Museo Borghese (Villa Borghese) Tel. 06   32810. Tues-Sun 9am-7pm (entry by reservation only at 9am, 11am, 1pm, 3pm, and   5pm); Mon closed. It is advisable to book at least a few days in advance. € 6.20   + € 1.03 booking fee. Bus 116 or 910 to Porta Pinciana. 
	Capitoline Museums
		Made up of two   separate buildings: the Palazzo Nuovo houses an incredibly rich collection of   Roman sculpture (including the original of the equestrian statue of Marcus   Aurelius); the Palazzo dei Conservatori and Braccio Nuovo house more ancient   sculpture as well as Renaissance and Baroque art. Piazza del Campidoglio. Tel.   06 67102071. Open Tues-Sun 9:30am-7pm. € 6.20; reduced € 4.13. Ticket also   includes access to the recently restored tabularium, the 1st century BC Roman   records hall that offers spectacular views across the Forum to the Colosseum and   Palatine Hill. Bus 40 Express, 64, or 170 to Piazza Venezia.
	
	Palazzo   Senatorio
		Every Sunday there are guided tours, including a visit to   the "Stanza del Sindaco," (the mayor's office) with its spectacular view over   the Imperial Forums. Open 9am-4pm.
	
	Torre   Campanaria (Renaissance bell tower on the Capitoline Hill)
		Only open   on the last Sunday of the month, from 9am-3:45pm. As there is a limit of 100   visitors per day (age 14 and up only), it is necessary to make reservations.  
	Castel   Sant'Angelo
		This complex started out as the Emperor Hadrian's mausoleum,   then in the Middle Ages was made into a fortress, and in the Renaissance was   outfitted with papal apartments. A funerary, military, and domestic monument all   in one! Great views over Rome from the top. Lungotevere Castello. Tel. 06   6819111 Tues-Sun 9am-8pm. € 5.16. Bus 64 or 40 Express to Ponte Vittorio   Emanuele or Piazza Pia. 
	Complesso del Vittoriano
		Built into the   back of the gigantic "wedding cake" at Piazza Venezia, near the Museo del   Risorgimento), this museum hosts some of the most important touring exhibitions   of art in Europe. Entrance on Via S. Pietro in Carcere, off Via dei Fori   Imperiali. Tel. 06 6780664. Open Mon-Thurs 9:30am-8:30pm. € 7.75; reduced €   5.16. Bus 64 or 40 Express to Piazza Venezia; or Metro B: Colosseo, and a short   walk up Via dei Fori Imperiali. 
	Crypta   Balbi
		The underground ruins of the ancient Theater of Balbus have   recently been converted into a museum of ancient and medieval art. Via delle   Botteghe Oscure, 29. Open Tues-Sun 9am-7pm. € 4.13; reduced € 2.07. bus 64 or 40   Express to Piazza Venezia or Largo Argentina. 
	Etruscan   Museum at Villa Giulia
		An amazing collection of Etruscan tomb   artifacts is on display in this 16th century villa. The detail and craftsmanship   of this artwork from 2800 years ago will absolutely astonish you--you've never   seen stuff so old looking so good! Piazza Villa Giulia 9. Tel. 06 3201951.   Tues-Sun 9am-7pm. € 4.13. Tram 30 or 225 from Metro A: Flaminio. 
	Explora:   Il Museo dei Bambini (Children's Museum of Rome)
		Exhibits for   (young) children, Borghetto Flaminio, Via Flaminio, 80. Tel. 06 3613741.   Admission at pre-defined times: Mon 9:30am, and 11:30am; Tues-Fri at 9:30am,   11:30am, 3pm and 5pm; Sat-Sun 10am, noon, 3pm, 5pm. € 5.16; children 0-3 free.   Groups (minimum 15) € 3.62. 
	Galleria   Colonna
		Picture gallery with works by Guercino, Tintoretto, Palma   Vecchio, and Carracci. Via della Pilotta 17 Tel. 06 6784350. Open only Sat   9am-1pm. € 5.16. Bus 492 or 62 to Largo Chigi or bus 40 Express or 64 to Piazza   Venezia, then a short walk up Via del Corso. 
	Galleria   Comunale d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea
		The city's   permanent collection of modern art, especially strong on 19th and 20th century   Italian art. Via Francesco Crispi, 24. Tel. 06 4742848. Tues-Sat   10am-1:30pm/2:30pm-6:30pm; Sun 9:30am-1:30pm. € 2.58. Later 20th century works   and temporary exhibitions also on display at the museum's satellite location,   Via Reggio Emilia, 54. Tel. 06 8844930. Open Tue-Sun 19am-7pm. To Via Crispi:   Bus 62 or 492 to Piazza Barberini or Metro Line A: Barberini. 
	Galleria   dell'Accademia di S. Luca
		A small picture gallery with paintings by   Raphael, Bassano, Rubens, and Guercino. Piazza dell'Accademia di S. Luca 77.   Tel. 06 6798850. Closed for restoration at time of printing; expected to reopen   in December 2001. 
	Galleria   Doria Pamphilj
		This former noble family palace offers an   incredibly rich collection of paintings as well as a real sense of the lifestyle   of the Renaissance rich and famous, with access to the banquet halls and   apartments, all enhanced by the lively audio guide. Palazzo Doria   Pamphilj/Piazza del Collegio Romano 2. Tel. 06 6797323. Open Fri-Wed 10am-5pm. €   7.23; reduced € 5.68. Ticket includes audio guide. Guided tours of the private   apartments mornings only, 10:30am-12:30pm; € 2.58. Bus 40 Express or 64 to   Piazza Venezia or 492 or 62 to Via del Corso. 
	Galleria   Nazionale d'Arte Moderna
		The national Italian collection of modern art   is located in the cool atmosphere of this palace in the Villa Borghese. Works by   DeChirico, Carra', the Macchiaioli, and a few non-Italians like Kandinsky,   Klimt, and Cezanne. Viale delle Belle Arti, 131. Tel. 06 322981. Tues-Sun   8:30am-7:30pm € 6.20. Tram 30 from Metro Line A: Flaminio. 
	Galleria   Spada
		A beautiful Renaissance palace housing works by Reni, Guercino,   Titian, and Gentileschi. Most noteworthy is Borromini's fantastically   illusionistic trompe l'oeil corridor in the courtyard. Piazza Capodiferro 13.   Tel. 06 6861158. Tues-Sat 8:30am-7:30pm; Sun and holidays 9am-6:30pm. € 5.16;   reduced € 2.58. Bus 40 Express, 64, H, 492, or 62 to Largo Argentina. 
	Goethe   Memorial House
		Italy, and Rome especially, had an incredible   influence on Goethe, and in the rooms of this apartment where Goethe lived in   1700 have been opened to the public to celebrate the poet and his relationship   with Italy. Via del Corso, 18. Tel. 06 32650412. Open Wed-Mon 10am-6pm. € 2.58;   reduced € 1.55. Bus 62 or 492 to Largo Chigi or Metro Line A: Spagna or   Flaminio. 
	Keats-Shelley Memorial House
		Keats spent the   last months of his life in this apartment, dying here in 1821. This memorial   house is dedicated not only to Keats but also to the other Romantic poets who   wrote in Rome, like Shelley, Byron, and Hunt. Piazza di Spagna, 26. Tel. 06   6784235. Open Mon-Fri 9am-1pm, 3pm-6pm (2:30pm-5:30pm Oct-Mar). € 2.58. Metro   Line A: Spagna. 
	Museo   dell'Alto Medioevo (Early Middle Ages)
		A collection of   decorative arts from the fall of the Roman Empire to the early Renaissance, from   sword handles to beaded jewelry. Viale Lincoln, 3 (EUR). Tel. 06 54228199. Open   Tues-Sun 9am-8pm. € 2.07. Metro Line B: EUR-Fermi or bus 714 to Piazza G.   Marconi. 
	Museo   Barracco
		Ancient sculpture and artifacts from the Assyrian, Egyptian,   Greek, and Roman periods. Corso Vittorio Emanuele II 166. Tel. 06 68806848. Open   Tues-Sun 9am-7pm. € 2.58. Bus 40 Express, 64, H, 492, or 62 to Largo Argentina. 
	Museo   Canonica
		The collection, studio, and apartment of the musician and   sculptor Pietro Canonica who died in 1959. Viale P. Canonica 2 (Villa Borghese).   Tel. 06 8842279. Tues-Sun 9am-7pm. € 2.58.
	Museo della Casina delle Civette
		One of the   latest additions to Rome's line-up of museums, remarkable for its Art-Nouveau   stained glass windows and the recently restored villa. Villa Torlonia (Via   Nomentana). Tel. 06 44250072. Open Tues-Sun 9am-5pm (until 7pm in summer). €   2.58; reduced € 1.55. Bus 62 or 60 Express to Via Nomentana/Villa Torlonia. 
	Museo   della Civilta' Romana
		A fascinating museum set up during the Fascist   period, dedicated to glorifying Imperial Rome. It contains a huge model of the   ancient city (scale 1:250), plus plaster casts of its monuments, military   operations, and more. Really gives you an idea of what it used to be like before   everything fell into ruin! Piazza G. Agnelli 10 (EUR). Tel. 06 5926135. Open   Tues-Sat 9am-6:45pm; Sun and holidays 9am-1pm. € 4.13. Metro Line B: EUR-Fermi   or bus 714 to Piazza G. Marconi. 
	Museo   della Comunita' Ebraica
		Located inside the Synagogue in the old Jewish   ghetto area, this museum houses Judaic art as well as documents and photographs   chronicling the history of the Jews in Rome from the 16th century, when the   Ghetto was established, to the World War II era. Lungotevere de' Cenci. Tel. 06   6840061. Mon-Thurs 9am-7:30pm; Fri 9:30am-1:30pm; Sun 9am-noon (Oct-Mar Mon-Thur   9am-4:30pm, Fri 9:30am-1:30pm, Sun 9am-noon). Sat and Jewish holidays closed. €   5.16. Bus 23 to Lungotevere de' Cenci (or Lungotevere degli Anguillara and walk   across Tiber Island). Or a short walk from Largo Argentina (bus 40 Express, 64,   492, or 62). 
	Museo   del Corso
		This centrally-located gallery hosts a wide variety of   exhibitions. Via del Corso, 320. Tel. 06 6786209. Open Teus-Sun 10am-8pm.   Admission generally € 6.20. 
	Museo   delle Arti e Tradizioni Popolari
		Italian tools,   crafts, clothing, furniture, musical instruments, jewelry, and more-- part of   the EUR-wide campaign to promote Italian heritage. Piazza Marconi 8 (EUR). Tel.   06 5926148. Open Tues-Sun 9am-8pm. € 4.13. Metro Line B: EUR-Fermi or bus 714 to   Piazza G. Marconi. 
	Museo di   Roma in Trastevere
		On Piazza San Egidio in Trastevere, this small   space features exhibits on Roman folklore and special exhibits from time to   time. Piazza San Egidio. Tel. 06 5816563. Open Tues-Sun 10am-8pm. € 5.16. 
	Museo   Napoleonico
		Houses Napoleon's collection of books, art, curios, and   other knick-knacks. Piazza Ponte Umberto I. Tel. 06 68806286. Tues-Sat 9am-7pm;   Sun 9am-2pm. € 2.58. Bus 492, 70, 81, 87, or 628 to Ponte Umberto I. 
	Museo   Nazionale d'Arte Orientale
		On display inside the restored Palazzo   Brancaccio is the most important collection of Oriental art in Italy. Via   Merulana, 248 (near S. Maria Maggiore). Tel. 06 4874415. Mon, Wed, Fri, Sat   8:30-2pm; Tues, Thurs, Sun 8:30am-7:30pm (closed 1st and 3rd Mon of the month).   € 4.13. Metro A: Vittorio Emanuele. 
	Museo   Nazionale degli Strumenti Musicali
		The Gorga   collection of over 800 musical instruments, from ancient to modern. Rare and   beautiful pieces including flutes, violins, and the especially noteworthy   Barberini harp. Piazza S. Croce in Gerusalemme, 9a. Tel. 06 7014796. Open   Tue-Sun 8:30am-7pm. € 2.07. Bus 9 to Santa Croce. 
	Museo   Preistorico ed Etnografico Luigi Pigorini
		Prehistoric   Italian artifacts plus ethnological material from other cultures, including a   real Neanderthal skull! The collection is actually quite good for what it is,   but if dusty cases of unidentified stone objects (petrified gnocchi?) aren't   your thing, pick another museum. Viale Lincoln 1 (EUR). Tel. 06 549521. Open   Mon-Sat 9am-2pm; Sun and holidays 9am-8pm. € 4.13. Metro Line B: EUR-Fermi or   bus 714 to Piazza G. Marconi. 
	Museo   del Risorgimento
		This small museum underneath the Vittoriano   contains items relating to the Risorgimento, the revolution that created modern   Italy in 1870. Via di San Pietro in Carcere. Tel 06 6793526. Open daily 9am-8pm.   € 2.07. 
	Palazzo   Altemps
		This recently restored, airy and pleasant palazzo near   Piazza Navona houses the Ludovisi collection of Roman sculpture. Piazza S.   Apollinare 44. Tel. 06 6897091 / 06 6833759. Open Tues-Sun 9am-8pm € 5.16. Bus   492, 70, 81, 87, or 628 to Corso Rinascimento/Piazza Cinque Lune. 
	Palazzo   Barberini (Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica)
		A 17th century   palazzo turned picture gallery, featuring works of the Renaissance and Baroque,   including paintings by Raphael, Caravaggio, and Guido Reni. Special exhibitions   are also held here throughout the year. Via Barberini 18. Tel. 06 42003669 / 06   4824184. Tues-Sun 9am-7:30pm. € 6.20. Metro Line A: Barberini or bus 492 or 62. 
	Palazzo   Corsini (Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica)
		The overflow   from the national collection at Palazzo Barberini is housed here, including the   standard assortment of works by Guercino, Reni, Caravaggio, Rubens, and   Carracci. Via della Lungara 10. Tel. 06 68802323. Tues-Sun 9am-7:30pm. € 4.13.   Bus 23 to Lungotevere della Farnesina. 
	Palazzo   delle Esposizioni
		Three to four special exhibitions, ranging in   period from ancient to modern, are on view here at any given time. Via Nazionale   194. Tel. 06 4885465. Wed-Mon 10am-9pm. € 7.75; reduced € 4.13. Bus 64, 170, 70,   or H to Via Nazionale. 
	Palazzo   Massimo alle Terme
		The restoration of this palazzo, which   contains wonderful pieces of ancient sculpture, fresco, and mosaic, has made the   visit here a much more airy and informative experience. Largo di Villa Peretti   2. Tel. 06 48903500; 06 48903501; 06 48903502; 06 48903503. Tues-Sun 9am-7:45pm.   € 6.20; reduced € 3.10. Any bus or metro to Termini. 
	Palazzo   Venezia Museum
		Rome's first Renaissance building, which was   Mussolini's headquarters during the Fascist regime, now houses special exhibits,   usually of a specifically Roman theme. Via del Plebiscito 118. Tel. 06 6798865.   Open Tue-Sun 9am-2pm. € 4.13. Bus 40 Express, 64, 62, 492, 70, 81 or H to Piazza   Venezia. 
	Scuderie   Papali al Quirinale
		Someone had the brilliant idea to convert the   old papal stables on the Quirinal Hill into museum space, and the result has   been a terrific success, as important exhibitions from all over the world are   brought here throughout the year. Via XXIV Maggio. Tel. 06 696270. Mon-Sun   9am-11pm. € 7.75; reduced € 5.16. Bus 492, 62, or 175 to Largo del Tritone, or   64 or 170 to Via Nazionale (corner of Via XXIV Maggio.) 
	Vatican   Museums and Sistine Chapel
		So what do you want to see? Egyptian mummies?   Etruscan gold? Greek marbles? Medieval tapestries? Renaissance paintings? How   about a moon rock from the Apollo 11 mission? It's all here in abundance, the   best of the best, in the elongated complex known as the Vatican Museums, which   also provides access to the famous Raphael rooms and Michelangelo's frescoes in   the Sistine Chapel. During high season, we suggest that you go in the afternoon,   when the crowds are much lighter, and if possible, to avoid Saturday entirely!   Viale del Vaticano. Tel. 06 69883041. Open Mon-Fri 8:45am-4:45pm (Nov-Dec   8:45am-12:45pm); Sat 8:45am-1:45pm; Sun closed (except last Sun of month, open   8:45am-1:45pm, admission free). Entry up to 1 hour before closing. € 9.30;   reduced € 6.20. Metro Line A: Ottaviano or Cipro-Musei Vaticani, or bus 81 or   492 to Piazza Risorgimento. 
	Villa   Farnesina
		This graceful little Renaissance villa along the banks of   the Tiber (on the Trastevere side) has frescoes by Raphael, Peruzzi, and Sodoma,   and is in general a very pleasant place to be. Via della Lungara, 230. Tel. 06   68801767. Mon-Sat 9am-1pm. € 4.13. Bus 23 to Ponte Sisto, or Tram 8 to Piazza   G.G. Belli and a short walk north along the river.
	» Churches
	Rome has   more basilicas than you, the average tourist, have the time or interest for.   (Don't worry, we haven't been to all of them either.) The good news is that even   though you can't hope to see them all, pretty much any church you go to has some   kind of treasure in it that makes it worth a quick look inside, whether it's the   head of a saint, ancient ruins in the crypt, or a famous artist's masterpiece.   Rome's churches come in all shapes, sizes, and time periods, from the 4th   century to the 20th, and best of all, they're free, and a great place to escape   the heat in the summer. 
	While most   of the major basilicas are open all day from the early morning to the early   evening, some of the smaller churches have limited, strange hours that change   constantly. And sometimes the custodian just doesn't show up. With that in mind,   mid-morning or late afternoon are good times to try for the less famous   churches. And note that the larger basilicas have a dress code: those with bare   knees or shoulders may not be admitted. 
	BIGGEST CHURCH   NOT ONLY IN ROME BUT IN ENTIRE WORLD 
			St.   Peter's in the Vatican. Also wins prize for Most Expensive Church,   Church with Most Artists' Masterpieces, Church with Most Popes' Tombs, Church   with Most Indiana Jones-esque Archaeological Site Underneath . . . The list of   what this church has is long, so we'll cut to the chase. Go there. It's amazing.   No excuse for skipping it: it's open all the time, and hey, you never know, you   might even see the pope. Metro A: Ottaviano. Bus 40 Express, 62, 64. 
	CATHEDRAL OF   ROME & MOTHER CHURCH OF THE WORLD 
		This   hefty title goes to St. John Lateran (San Giovanni). The 17th-century   Borromini-designed basilica you see here today was built over the spot where   Constantine built Rome's very first church in 318 AD. Because of its primacy,   San Giovanni NOT St. Peter's is in fact the technical seat of all that the Pope   and the Catholic church do worldwide. Bonus feature: the heads of St. Peter and   St. Paul are housed above the baldacchino. Metro A: San Giovanni. Bus 85, 87,   117. 
	BEST   MOSAICS
		Hands down, Santa Maria Maggiore. (First   runner-up: Santa Maria in Trastevere). Everywhere you look in this magnificent   church (one of the four patriarchal basilicas of Rome), there are tesserae, tiny   tiles of colored marble and gold, telling Biblical stories, from the nave to the   apse. Dazzling. This church is also home to the tomb of our favorite Baroque   artist, Gian Lorenzo Bernini, who died in 1680 at the age of 82. Metro A or B:   Termini. Bus 70 to Piazza Esquilino or any bus to Termini. 
	BEST POST-FIRE   REBUILDING
		The blaze of 1823 almost completely devastated the original   basilica of San Paolo Fuori le   Mura (St. Paul's Outside the Walls), which dated back to the 4th century. The reconstructed basilica,   full of color, preserves the original design of a vast rectangle divided in five   aisles. People with a granite fetish will appreciate the 80 monolithic columns   lining the central nave. Metro B: San Paolo. Bus 23 or J4. 
	CHURCH WITH   MOST MOTLEY ASSEMBLAGE
		The 12th-century basilica of San Clemente is   the run-away winner here, effortlessly combining elements of a 4th-century   church, an imperial Roman palace, and a Mithraeum (a cult chamber for an Eastern   religion involving sacrificial bulls, a hero in a chef's hat, and scorpions   seizing testicles.) Via San Giovanni in Laterano. Metro B: Colosseo or Metro A:   San Giovanni. Bus 85, 87, 117. 
	CHURCH WITH   BEST SPECIAL EFFECTS
		The residents of the neighborhood   where Sant'Ignazio was built didn't want a dome blocking their   light, so Andrea Pozzo painted a fake dome on the ceiling, using the latest   trompe l'oeil techniques. The effect is best observed from a yellow marble disc   in the floor of the main nave, but from elsewhere in the church the "dome" just   looks distorted. Piazza di Sant'Ignazio (near Pantheon). Bus to Largo Argentina   or Via del Corso. 
	BEST LITTLE   BAROQUE CHURCHES
		Rome has plenty of big Baroque churches, like   St. Peter's and San Giovanni, but some of the most amazing work of men like   Bernini and Borromini is found in smaller, lesser known basilicas around the   city. What makes a Baroque church a great Baroque church is a successful   combination of curves, illusionistic spaces, theatricality, and movement,   without being too flamboyant. There are so many worthy candidates in this   category we couldn't choose just one. It just so happens that the three we've   chosen are all on the same street. 
	
		 
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			Sant'Andrea del Quirinale. Not surprisingly, this "pearl of   the Baroque" has the touch of the 17th-century genius Gian Lorenzo Bernini. The   master made use of polychromatic marbles, stucco, and gilding to give the   elliptical interior a typically Baroque richness. The theatrical element is   provided by the stucco of St. Andrew "rising to heaven" at the base of the dome.   Via del Quirinale. Bus 64, 40, 70, 170 to Via Nazionale/Via XXIV Maggio.  
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			San   Carlo alle Quattro Fontane. If ever architecture could be described as   tormented, this is it. Curves and countercurves. Convexity and concavity. A   sense of expanding space, pushing and pulling, in a very confined interior, and   you feel the tension. The intricately-coffered oval dome is dizzying. "San   Carlino" is Borromini at his best. Metro A: Barberini or any bus to Via   Nazionale.  
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			Santa   Maria della Vittoria. The interior follows all the rules of the   Baroque—sumptuousness, gold, color—but the real treasure here is on the left   before the altar, in the Cornaro Chapel. Bernini's Ecstasy of St. Teresa is   framed by "theater boxes" of excited onlookers, peeping at the near-sexual   rapture of the saint. You gotta love Bernini. Largo Santa Susanna (the eastern   end of Via del Quirinale).  
BEST   COUNTER-REFORMATION CHURCH
		What's a Counter-Reformation church, you ask?   It's a church that has an austere façade (in order to defend against the pesky   Protestants) and an unobstructed interior (in order to gather the masses   together and transmit Church doctrine better). The 16th-century Gesù has both.   But just because the inside is unobstructed doesn't mean it's undecorated. In   fact, the rich interior would be added a century later, in the Baroque, when the   popes weren't so concerned about defending themselves against Luther anymore.   Piazza del Gesù (Via del Plebiscito). Any bus to Piazza Venezia. 
	COOLEST CHURCH   IN ROME
		And the winner is…Santo Stefano   Rotondo. The first thing that   makes this church cool is its location. If you understand Italian and have a   couple hours to spare, the amiable custodian is more than happy to tell you   everything there is to know about this church. Via Santo Stefano Rotondo. Metro   A: San Giovanni or bus 81. 
	BEST CHURCH FOR   PEACE & SOLITUDE
		The quiet, cool interior of Santa   Sabina on the Aventine Hill makes it a great place to escape the tourist   crowds that permeate the rest of Rome. The shady park nearby also provides a   wonderful view over the city to the Vatican. Via di Santa Sabina. Metro B: Circo   Massimo, or bus 95. 
	OLDEST CHURCH   (still standing):
		Though this basilica has been added onto   multiple times over the centuries, the basic floorplan and wall structure of   Santa Maria in Trastevere dates back to the 340s AD. The granite columns that   line its nave were pillaged from the by-then defunct Baths of Caracalla in the   9th century. The apse features gorgeous and important mosaics by Pietro   Cavallini. Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere. Bus 23, 280, or J4 to Ponte Sisto.   Tram 8 or Bus H to Piazza Sonnino. 
	NEWEST CHURCH   (worth visiting)
		Most of Rome's 20th-century churches are   located out of the center.  There is one exception, however. Santi Pietro e   Paolo in the Mussolini-era quarter called EUR. Bus 170 to Piazzale   dell'Agricoltura or Metro B: EUR-Magliana. 
	RELICS!
		Some on display, some not. Rome would have   more relics if it had not been for the black-market trading in the Middle Ages   of bones and instruments of saints' martyrdoms. 
	
		 
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			Santa   Croce in Gerusalemme. If relics were gold, Santa Croce would be the   mother lode. Here you can marvel at the items St. Helen brought in her knapsack   from a 4th-century trip to the Holy Land. The inventory includes a piece of the   true cross (hence the name of the church), some thorns from Christ's crown, and   some soil from Calvary. Wild-card relic: one finger of St. Thomas. Metro A: San   Giovanni and a five-minute walk.  
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			San   Pietro in Vincoli (St. Peter in Chains). Most tourists are drawn here for the presence of Michelangelo's   Moses, which by the way may disappoint if you've seen the Pietà or David, but   for the faithful, the most important thing in this basilica is the glass box   holding the chains that bound Peter in his cells in Judea and Rome. According to   legend the chains miraculously welded themselves together in the Middle Ages.   Metro B: Cavour.  
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			Sant'Agnese in Agone (Piazza Navona). Apart from   being designed by the Baroque master Borromini and being located on one of   Rome's most important and touristed squares, this basilica also offers the   attraction of the Sacra Testa (Holy Head) of St. Agnes in a side chapel. It's a   pretty small skull, but then again, she was only 12 years old when she was   decapitated. Go across town to the basilica of Sant'Agnese Fuori le Mura on the   Via Nomentana to find the rest of her body. There are catacombs there as well.   Bus 36 to Via Nomentana.  
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			San   Lorenzo in Lucina. Piazza San Lorenzo in Lucina.       Metro A:   Spagna.  
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			SS   Vincenzo e Anastasio. Piazza di Trevi/Vicolo dei Modelli. Most   visitors ignore this little Baroque church as they gawk instead at the humongous   Trevi fountain which dominates the square. But little do these people know that   inside this church are the spleens, pancreases, and livers of all the popes from   Sixtus V (1590) to Leo XIII (1903)! Metro A: Spagna.  
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			Museo   delle Anime dei Defunti. This may be the weirdest museum in Rome,   devoted to the souls of the dead trapped in purgatory who keep leaving messages   for the living. Inside the church of Sacro Cuore del Suffragio, Lungotevere   Prati, 12. Free. Open 7:30am-11am (10am in the summer), 5pm-7:30pm. Bus 492 to   Piazza Cavour.  
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			Santa   Maria Sopra Minerva. Here lies the body of St. Catherine. After her   death, it was separated from her head, which remained in Siena, the town where   she was born. Piazza della Minerva, near the Pantheon (look for the elephant   obelisk outside the church). Open 7am-7pm. Bus 40 Express or 64 to Largo   Argentina, or 116 to the Pantheon.  
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			Santa   Cecilia in Trastevere. You know, some martyrs had it worse than   others: first they tried to suffocate little Cecilia in the hot steam room of   her own baths, then when that didn't work they tried to chop off her head, but   after three strokes of the ax they could not completely sever her head from her   body. She managed to stay alive for three more days, all the while singing hymns   to the glory of God—one reason why she is now the patron saint of music! Bus 23   to Ponte Cestio, then a short walk west through the small streets of Trastevere.  
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			Crypt of   the Cappuccin Monks in Santa Maria della Concezione. Via Veneto. Painstakingly and artistically   arranged, the thousands of bones here aren't technically relics, in that they   aren't the remains of saints, but if you've only got time for one body-part   church in your itinerary, make it this one. You won't be sorry. Who would have   thought you could make a chandelier out of tibias? Metro A: Barberini.  
» The Appian Way 
	Known as   the "Queen of Roads" (regina viarum) throughout antiquity, the Via Appia was   built in the 4th century BC to link Rome with Capua in Campania, and eventually   Brindisi on the Adriatic coast. 
	Just   outside Porta San Sebastiano at Via Appia Antica, 42, is the information office   of the Parco dell'Appia Antica, which provides maps of the ancient road and   organizes tours and activities for children. Tel. 800 028000. Mon-Sun   9am-5:30pm. To get to the ancient Appian Way, the easiest method is the J3 bus   from Termini; alternatively you can take Metro Line A to San Giovanni and then   bus 218 to the Domine Quo Vadis end of the road, or Line A to Colli Albani and   then bus 660 to the Cecilia Metella end of the road.
			
	
	Museo   delle Mura (Museum of the Roman Fortification Walls)
		The best thing about   this museum is that is allows you to walk along the embattlements of a good   portion of the 3rd century AD Roman walls and survey the countryside for   potential Gothic invasions. Essential for all aspiring centurions. Porta San   Sebastiano (Via San Sebastiano, 18). Tues-Sun 9am-7pm; Mon closed. In winter and   on Sundays, the museum closes at 5pm. 
	Domine   Quo Vadis?
		A small church near Porta San Sebastiano, built on the spot   where Jesus is supposed to have appeared to the apostle Peter--in flight from   Rome and crucifixion--and shamed him into going back to the city. Just inside   the door you'll see two footprints in the pavement, supposedly left by Christ   when he had the chat with Peter. 
	Catacombs 
	The   catacombs are subterranean systems of rock-cut hallways and niches, built to   house the bodies of the dead who could not afford a flashy tomb above the   ground. The most well-known are the Christian catacombs concentrated along the   Via Appia Antica, although there were pagan and Jewish catacombs as well.   Scholars are divided as to whether the catacombs also served as secret places of   meeting and worship in the period when Christianity was outlawed. 
	
		 
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			Catacombs of San Callisto
 Via Appia Antica, 110. Open   Thurs-Tues 8:30am-noon, 2:30pm-5:30pm (only until 5pm Oct-Mar); Wed closed.
 
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			Catacombs of San Sebastiano
 Via Appia Antica, 136.   Mon-Sat 8.30am-noon, 2.30pm-5.30pm (only until 5pm Oct-Mar). Sun closed.
 
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			Catacombs of San Domitilla
 Via delle Sette Chiese, 283.   Wed-Mon 8:30am-noon/2:30pm-5pm; Tues closed. Closed from late Dec to late Jan.
 
Also worth   visiting are the Catacombs of Santa Priscilla on the Via Salaria, near   Villa Ada, and the Catacombs of Sant'Agnese, beneath the church of   Sant'Agnese Fuori le Mura on the Via Nomentana. 
	Villa and   Circus of Maxentius and Mausoleum of Romulus
		Before Constantine knocked him out in 312 AD   at the battle of the Milvian Bridge, Maxentius held the title of "emperor" for a   while.       Via Appia Antica, 153. Open Tues-Sun 9am-7pm (Oct-Mar 9am-5pm); Mon   closed.
	Tomb of   Cecilia Metella
		Farther down the Appian Way a squat, round structure with   medieval crenellations comes into view. This started out as a funerary monument   to a wealthy young lady of the 1st century BC; in the 1300's it was converted   into a fortress. Via Appia Antica, 161. Open Tues-Sun 9am-7:30pm. 
	» Other things to do & see 
	A couple of   off-beat selections... 
	Flea   markets 
	Porta   Portese is perhaps the   longest market you will ever see. It has everything, both new and old: clothes,   shoes, leather, food, bric-a-brac, and old taps. To help skip half a kilometer   of the junkier stalls, we recommend you arrive at Via Ippolito Nievo. Porta   Portese is only open Sunday mornings, sunrise to 1:30pm. Try to get there before   9am to avoid the worst crowds. To get here from Termini, catch bus 40 Express or   64 to Largo Argentina, then Tram 8 to Piazza Ippolito Nievo. From the Vatican   area, catch bus 23 from Piazza Risorgimento, get off at Piazza G.G. Belli (Ponte   Garibaldi), then pick up Tram 8. 
	The market   at Via Sannio has mainly clothing and shoes, new and used. It is open   Mon-Sat, 8:30am-1:30pm. Metro Line A: San Giovanni. Once you come out of the   metro station, as you face the ancient Roman walls, Via Sannio is the street on   the left just before the walls. 
	Puppet   theatre 
	Besides   supplying one of Rome's most spectacular views, the Janiculum Hill (Gianicolo)   also plays hosts to the colorful open-air Teatro di Pulcinella puppet theatre.   Here, from 4pm-7pm daily, and also from 10:30am-1pm on Saturdays and Sundays,   you can join excited children in these free productions (a small donation is   expected). The Janiculum cannon is also sounded every day at noon. 
	Soccer   matches 
	From   September until late May, you can catch one of the city's two teams, Roma and   Lazio, playing nearly every Sunday at the Stadio Olimpico.  Romanisti are in the   curva sud, while Laziali are found in the curva nord. To get to the stadium take   Metro Line A to Flaminio, then Tram 225 to Piazza Mancini and follow the crowds   as the stadium is right across the river. Or take Metro Line A to Ottaviano and   then bus 32 up to the stadium.