Overview
Ancient Rome
Vatican & Sacred Art
Roman Cuisine
Art & Museums
Neighborhood Walks
Day Trips
History
Culture
Practical Info
Rome is the Eternal City in the most literal sense—a place where you walk on 2,000-year-old roads, eat lunch in a piazza designed by Bernini, and pass a Caravaggio hanging in a dimly lit chapel on your way to dinner. The Colosseum, Roman Forum, and Palatine Hill anchor the ancient world in the very heart of the modern city, while the Vatican Museums house one of humanity's greatest art collections culminating in the Sistine Chapel ceiling. But Rome rewards those who wander beyond the headlines: Trastevere's cobblestone lanes and ivy-draped trattorias, the Aventine Hill's secret keyhole framing St. Peter's dome, the Appian Way's ancient tombs stretching into the countryside, and neighborhood markets where Romans buy their daily produce. The food is deceptively simple and extraordinary—cacio e pepe, carbonara, supplì, and thin-crust Roman pizza perfected over centuries. Espresso at the bar is a one-euro ritual, gelato is an art form, and aperitivo hour fills piazzas with Aperol spritzes and free snacks at sunset. Rome's public transport is functional if imperfect (two Metro lines, extensive buses), but the centro storico is best explored on foot—getting lost among the tangle of streets between the Pantheon and Piazza Navona is how you find Rome's real magic.
Discover Rome
13 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.