Sunday, 1 February 2009
Rome I
I've been slacking lately, or maybe just working too much. Regardless, this posting is long overdue and is going to be more brief than I would have liked.
Rome is wonderful. It's a big museum with a population of over 3.5 million.
In deciding what I wanted to see and do (besides eating) on this trip, I kept the list short. The trip was only for three and a half days, and the guidebook made it abundantly clear that it would take me over a month, just to see all of the museums.
The Short List:
1. The Sistine Chapel
2. Raphael's The School Of Athens at the Vatican Museum's Raphael Room
3. The Colosseum
...with everything else being gravy.
Friday We arrived in the afternoon and in the evening we mostly focused on the wandering around and eating.
This bridge is covered in beautiful sculptures.
We also made it to the Pantheon
Its ceiling is particularly famous.
Saturday
In the morning, we set off to the Vatican Museum.
The museum, much like an Ikea, is laid out such that visitors must walk through everything, rather than just heading to the items your looking for. In the case of Ikea, it's to make you think that you really need a furry, white rug (Thanks, Adam!) in a moment of weakness, whereas at the Vatican, it's unavoidable due to the floorplan.
The Raphael Room and the Sistine Chapel are towards the end of the mighty journey, so we decided to bolt through the entire museum in an effort to beat the crowds some of whom were asking if this room of maps with a painted ceiling was the Sistine Chapel.
This plan worked well. When we finished repeating the cycle on round two, the Sistine Chapel was 3x as packed as it had been an hour earlier. I've no pictures of either. Photography is not allowed in the Chapel, and to be fair, it has been thoroughly photographed by people far more skilled with a camera than I.
We wandered around the Vatican afterwards, which is considered a seperate country from Italy. It even has it's own post office with Vatican-issued stamps.
St. Peter's was also a good visit. It's sublime. The sort of faith that leads to the creation of monuments such as this is alien to me.
Following lunch, we headed to the Castello San Angelo. The views from the roof are beautiful and it has a nice cafe from which we enjoyed the sun. I took the first picture on this entry from the roof. (Unfortuantely, I didn't notice the dirt on my lens until later in the day, so expect to see that spot a bit more.)
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