Twenty million tourists are drawn to Rome every year. They admire the Colosseum and St. Peter's Cathedral, sit down on the Spanish Staircase, and stroll along the Campo de Fiori. But the Eternal City has much more to offer: secrets, clandestine spots, stories sunk into oblivion. Why, for example, is there a lighthouse, when Rome is not near the coast? Where is the grave of Pope Joan? What does the hangman's cloak have to tell? Which landmark was nearly stolen? Where can you find the formula that supposedly turns lead into gold? Where do you get rewarded for impossible misbehaviour? And why is the world's oldest baby hatch here, of all places? This book will bring you to spots that will show you Rome from a completely new side.
111 Places in Rome That You Must Not Miss
Description
Author Description
Annett Klingner, born in 1966, studied Literature, History of Art, and Medieval Literature in Berlin and Rome. Since then, she has returned to her Eternal City again and again for lengthy periods in order to live and work there. Her fields of research are the reception of pagan customs in the Italian Renaissance, works of art on mythological and cosmological themes, as well as the history of the City of Rome.