Exploring the fringe of Rome with new friends

trastevergroup
Emily, Me, Manja and Marco (Shawn behind the camera). Can you tell we loved our gelato? Marco is the only one taking his time đŸ™‚

Who’d have thought we’d get the royal treatment from two people we’d never met in person? And yet, here were Manja and Marco (now our good friends, I should add) spending a delightful day by driving us all around to some off the beaten path, and amazing, sites in Rome.

First up was the Protestant, or Non-Catholic, cemetery (“Cimitero Acattolico”)…

angelofgrief
The “Angel of Grief” is an 1894 sculpture by William Wetmore Story which serves as the grave stone of the artist and his wife.
Keatsplaque
John Keats is one of the more well-known people buried here, though his tombstone, paired with this nearby plaque, is a riddle that requires both to identify him.
Cemetary
Very lush with trees, shrubs, flowers; tiered with eclectic nooks and crannies all around the grave sites.

 

Catcemetary
The cemetery is also a cat sanctuary.

After the cemetery, Marco using his mad Rome driving skills, we headed for Gianicolo Hill, as every day at noon a cannon fires. We didn’t make it in time, so instead went to Basilica of St Paul Outside the Walls. The 25 or so churches we saw were phenomenal – there are more than 900 in Rome alone!

girlswithcameras
Girls with cameras rock!
stpauloutside
Entering St Paul’s thru a gorgeous, massive marble columned walkway.
stpaulcath2
The Basilica, built around the 4th century AD (finished ~1800)
font
Small font – most baptismal fonts we saw were large and elaborate.
StPaulDOme
Beautiful art and architecture.
Me
Basilica selfies đŸ˜‰

I almost forgot – the most important highlight of the day (and every day): FOOD!

lunch
We ate at a yummy Sicilian restaurant (serious dining here, can’t you tell), Marco’s work lunch digs!
pistachio
And conveniently, where we ate lunch was a pasticceria too (pastry shop!)
cappucino
Macchiato.  I broke the golden rule of having milk in my coffee in the afternoon. It’s all about digestion in Italy (espresso/alcohol after a meal)  Aside from a cappuccino or the like at breakfast, it’s espresso or bust after that! Also, there is a very clear reason why Starbucks doesn’t exist in Italy.  I’ll speak more about Italian coffee in a future post, as it clearly deserves its own accolades!
girlssnacks
Granita for Emily and me – Shawn – fancy iced coffee I think!
girlsgranite
Chillin’ with the best world travelers one could find.
gelatogroup
We ate gelato. Oh, did we eat gelato. But walking 7-10 miles a day warranted it!
pizzas
We finished a long and awesome day with pizza. It was delish!

 

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5 thoughts on “Exploring the fringe of Rome with new friends

  1. Ahhh, you’re mighty nice. Amore didn’t finish the gelato last, he was merely holding the cups. I know because he’s always the first to finish any food. đŸ˜‰ I’m so glad that you approved of our choices for our day. I saw so many new things as well, and the Basilica was new even to Marco, at least from the inside. Next time – the cannon, at least! đŸ™‚

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ahhhh I’m so glad ONE of us has a fresh memory. Marco, always the gentleman!

      So glad some of your experiences were new, too!

      As to our day, I’ve not even touched upon Mussolini forum or Trastevere! I will be including those in my next post đŸ™‚

      Liked by 1 person

  2. How neat you could meet up and see the views together! And remembering all the goodies you had, and how inexpensive the coffee was and delish the gelato:) So envious at all the art in Italy!

    Like

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