With this tour we will reveal the main attractions of the wonderful historic center of Rome! You will be able to appreciate the most representative places and areas of the Capital, undisputed symbols throughout the globe of what was for a long time the cultural center and military supremacy of the ancient world. With the "Rome the center of the world" tour you can admire the majesty of the largest amphitheater ever built: the Colosseum!
The Roman Forum (in Latin Forum Romanum, although the Romans referred to it more often as Forum Magnum or simply Forum) is an archaeological area of Rome enclosed between the Palatine Hill, the Capitoline Hill, Via dei Fori Imperiali and the Colosseum, formed by the stratification of the remains of those buildings and monuments of heterogeneous eras which for much of the ancient history of Rome represented the political, legal, religious and economic center of the city of Rome, as well as the nerve center of the entire Roman civilization.
The Circus Maximus is an ancient Roman circus, dedicated to horse racing, built in Rome. Located in the valley between the Palatine and the Aventine, it has been remembered as a venue for games since the beginning of the city's history: in the valley there would have been the mythical episode of the rape of the Sabine women, on the occasion of the games called by Romulus in honor of the god Consus. Certainly the large flat space and its proximity to the Tiber landing, where trade had taken place from the most remote antiquity, meant that the site constituted, from the foundation of the city, the elective space in which to conduct market activities and exchanges with other populations, and - consequently - also the related ritual activities (think of the Hercules maxim) and socialization, such as games and competitions.
The Jewish ghetto of Rome is among the oldest ghettos in the world; in fact it arose 40 years after the one in Venice which is the first ever. The term derives from the name of the Venetian district, gheto, where there was a foundry (precisely gheto in Venetian), where the Jews of that city were forced to reside; another possible etymology traces the origin of this word to the Hebrew גט ghet (pl. גיטים ghittim or גיטין ghittin), which means separation.
You will make your own way to the meeting points