Rome city tour different in German, we will guide you through Rome, without much talk, by public transport and Schuster's Rappen Experience this beautiful city differently. Without time pressure, relax and experience one of the most beautiful cities in the world. Rome city tour different in German. We will guide you through Rome without much talk, with public transport and Schuster's rapping. Experience this beautiful city differently. Experience one of the most beautiful cities in the world without time pressure. My tour is 10 hours long And we walk about 15 km through Rome.
A group is never larger than 6 people
Secure your places for 2025 with City Guide Rome in Italy. Discover Rome in German. Planning made easy! Rome is waiting for you – come and write your own story!
The Colosseum (ancient name: Amphitheatrum Novum or Amphitheatrum Flavium, Italian: Colosseo, Anfiteatro Flavio) is the largest of the amphitheatres built in ancient Rome, the largest enclosed building of Roman antiquity and still the largest amphitheatre ever built in the world. Built between 72 and 80 AD, the Colosseum served as the venue for mostly extremely cruel and brutal events that were organized by members of the imperial family for the entertainment and amusement of the free residents of Rome and the Roman Empire with free admission. Today, the ruins of the building are one of the city's landmarks and at the same time a testament to the high level of architecture of the Romans in ancient times.
The Basilica of Saint Peter in the Vatican (Italian: San Pietro in Vaticano) in Rome, commonly called St. Peter's Basilica in German-speaking countries because of its size and importance (also Basilica Sancti Petri in Vaticano, St. Peter's Basilica, Vatican Basilica or Templum Vaticanum), is the memorial church of the apostle Simon Peter. It is located on the territory of the independent state of Vatican City and is one of the seven pilgrimage churches of Rome. With a built-up area of 20,139 m²[1] and a capacity of 20,000[2] people, St. Peter's Basilica is the largest of the papal basilicas and one of the largest and most important churches in the world.[
The square was already an important traffic junction in the time of the Roman Republic, as the Via Flaminia met the Porta Fontinalis in the Servian Wall here.[1] In the 15th century, the Venetian cardinal Pietro Barbo, later Pope Paul II, had his palace, the Palazzo Barbo, built on the west side of the square. The Venetian embassy to the Holy See was based there from 1567 to 1797, hence the palace's current name Palazzo Venezia. In 1660, the Palazzo Misciatelli was built to the north, which is now known as the Palazzo Bonaparte, because Letizia Ramolino, the mother of Napoleon Bonaparte, had her retirement home here.
You will make your own way to the meeting points