Touristic tours

Rome Imperial Tour (Coliseum – Roman Forum – Capitole Hill – Venice Square)

The Coliseum, whose real name is Flavian Amphitheatre, was built by two emperors of the Flavian family; Vespasian began it on 72 a.D. and his son Titus ended it on 80 a.D. On the same square we can admire the Arch of Constantine erected in the IV century a.D. and the Arch of Titus in the I century a.D.
We will continue walking through the Roman Forum, the biggest archaeological area in the world just in the heart of Rome. Arriving on the top of the Capitole hill, nowadays seat of the City Hall, we can admire the beautiful square designed by Michelangelo Buonarroti with the Palazzo Conservatori and the Palazzo Nuovo which are important Museums.After that, going down the Capitole Hill we'll get directly into Venice Square where we will be astonished by the Vittoriano, the biggest European monument.



Rome Baroque and Renaissance Tour

A walk in the heart of Baroque Rome: starting from Trevi fountain, the monumental celebration of the Virgin Aqueduct, crossing the Galleria Colonna recently restored and opened to the public, we’ll visit the Piazza Colonna, taking its name from the Column in honour of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius. And then Piazza Montecitorio, with the 17th century old tribunal is now the seat of Italian Parliament, Piazza Sant’Ignazio, beautiful rococo square and the Jesuit renaissance church with the illusionist dome by Andrea Pozzo. We’ll enter Pantheon with its huge Ancient Roman dome and the grave or the great Italian artist Raphael, the church of St. Louis of France, with the famous canvases by Caravaggio, the eclectic dome of Saint Ivo alla Sapienza by Borromini. Our tour finish off with Piazza Navona and its famous fountain of the Four Rivers designed by Bernini for the Pope Innocent X Pamphilj.


Isle Tiberina Tour

From the waters of Tevere emerges the Tiberina Isle that, according to a popular legend, arose from the accumulation of the Tarquini’s corn reserves, that were thrown in the river by the Romans after that, in 509 BC, they had sent away from the city the last King Tarquinio the Superb.
The characteristic form of a “boat” derives as a commemoration from another tradition: it seems, indeed, that during a pestilence the Romans went to Esculapio’s, God of medicine, whose main sanctuary was in Greece, in Livio tells that “the Priests gave the Roman ambassadors the sacred snake, which, once they arrived in Rome by a boat, slipped into the river Tevere in order to reach the isle that, from that day onward, was consecrated with a temple devoted to the therapeutic cult of the God”. In the same area, in 1584 the congregation of St. Giovanni di Dio built the Hospital “Fatebenefratelli”, or St. Giovanni from the name of the annexed church