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Rome

Travel Blog

ROME

SOMEWHERE buried deep within the rolling green hills that comprise Lazio's tranquil countryside, right where the Aniene river meets the Tiber, you'll find an obscure little town first founded in 735 BC by a pair of twins, Romulus and Remus (the former killed the latter in a disagreement over what to name the place - so it goes when you're raised by wolves). Not much to say about Rome, really. Oh, right, except that over the years it became the center of an empire, the capital of the Western world and, at its peak, the beating heart of the entire globe. It's where gladiators spilt each other's blood about the Colosseum, where the Pantheon and its famous dome paid homage to the gods (and, more so, geometry), where aqueduct technology was perfected (except for the whole madness-causing lead contamination thing) and what every ambitious Germanic-blooded barbarian boy outside its walls dreamt to one day sack. Rome's residents of note have included Caesar, Raphael, Mussolini and every single Pope (a sovereign European microstate, Vatican City is a walled-off enclave in a west-central pocket of town). During the reign of Emperor Augustus, Rome was the largest city in the world. Today, the population of Italy's capital (not counting the greater metropolitan 'burbs) officially clocks in at a modest 2.5 million - barely enough to keep it on the world's top 100 largest list. But what does size matter to a city which still goes by the nickname Caput Mundi -- Capital of the World?

-- Chris Bunting

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