This map will help to orient you as we continue with the tour. (googlemaps). The last post about the Pyramid ended where the green arrows begin, at the bottom left corner of the map. #1 is where the photo of #2 House of Augustus is taken. #3 is Circus Maximus. #4 is Forum Boarium.
We left the Pyramid of Cestius and drove north towards the center of Rome on Viale della Pyramid Cestia. The style of home and apartments seemed to be common in the area. Walls are stuccoed and bricked on the corners and base.
This is another one of my favorite "daily life" scenes to photograph. Fresh laundry hanging from the balcony.
The street changed to Viale Aventino and I saw a stand-alone home with a Mediterranean design.
We approached the Palantine Hill, and saw the House of Augustus standing tall on top of the hill. The bus turned left on Via del Circo Massimo and drove the full length of Circus Maximus.
A close-up of the House of Augustus.
A street vendor, selling the daily news, worked the crosswalk as the bus passed through Via della Greca and turned right.
On the right (south end) stood the Temple of Hercules Victor, aka Hercules the winner. This is the earliest surviving marble building in Rome, built around the later part of the second century BC. The building has gone through many changes since, becoming a church, renamed as another church, and officially became an "ancient monument" in 1935.
The Tritones Fountain, built in 1715, by the architect Carlo Bizzaccheri, was commissioned by Pope Clement XI during the work of levelling for Piazza Bocca della Verità, which was two meters above the current plan of the church of St. Maria in Cosmedin. Based on the emblem of the pontiff, the fountain has an octagonal basin with eight concave sides, to form an eight-pointed star like the emblem-star of the pope Albani, in the middle, above a group of boulders, adorned with aquatic grasses, in travertine stone as the whole complex of the fountain, rise two mighty tritons, kneeling and tails intertwined. The two tritons, who turn their backs with their arms raised on the shoulders support a cup-shaped open sea-shell, from which comes out the water and on whose board exterior is carved the emblem of the pontiff, three hills with a star. (Source and 3D Model is VERY COOL to view)
Wow, a short drive and so much to see!
1 comment:
Another great tour of a great city. Thank you for sharing and all of the research.
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