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Rome

A Wisdom Archive on Rome

Rome

A selection of articles related to Rome

We recommend this article: Rome - 1, and also this: Rome - 2.
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rome, Rome, Rome - Administrative subdivision of Rome, Rome - Demographics, Rome - Economy, Rome - Education, Rome - Events, Rome - History, Rome - Houses of worship, Rome - Markets and shopping areas, Rome - Monuments and sights, Rome - Province of Rome, Rome - Symbols and trivia, Rome - Transportation, Rome - Campo de' Fiori, Rome - Churches, Rome - Cultural Events, Rome - Porta Portese, Rome - White Night

ARTICLES RELATED TO Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia - Rome

Rome (Italian and Latin: Roma) is the capital of Italy and of its Latium region. It is located on the Tiber and Aniene rivers, near the Mediterranean Sea, at 41°54′N 12°29′E. The Vatican City, a sovereign enclave within Rome, is the seat of the Roman Catholic Church and the home of the Pope. Rome is the largest city and comune in Italy; the comune or municipality is one of the largest in Europe with an area of 1290 square kilometers. Within the city limits, the population is 2,823,807 (2004); almost 4 million live in the general area of Rome as represented by the province of Rome. Th ...

Including:

Read more here: » Rome: Encyclopedia - Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia II - New Rome - The Third Rome in Rome
Terza Roma (Third Rome) is also a name for the Benito Mussolini[1] plan to expand Rome towards Ostia and the sea. The Eur neighbourhood was the first step in that direction. Roma Tre is also the name of the Third University of Rome. ...

See also:

New Rome, New Rome - New Rome in the East, New Rome - Byzantium, New Rome - Moscow as the Third Rome, New Rome - New Rome in the West, New Rome - The Third Rome in Rome, New Rome - In Fiction, New Rome - Reference

Read more here: » New Rome: Encyclopedia II - New Rome - The Third Rome in Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia II - Rome - Houses of worship

Rome - Churches. Main articles: Churches of Rome, and [[{{{2}}}]], and [[{{{3}}}]], and

Rome, Rome - History, Rome - Demographics, Rome - Economy, Rome - Transportation, Rome - Education, Rome - Monuments and sights, Rome - Houses of worship, Rome - Churches, Rome - Administrative subdivision of Rome, Rome - Province of Rome, Rome - Markets and shopping areas, Rome - Porta Portese, Rome - Campo de' Fiori, Rome - Symbols and trivia, Rome - Events, Rome - Cultural Events, Rome - White Night

Read more here: » Rome: Encyclopedia II - Rome - Houses of worship

Rome: Encyclopedia II - JupiterMythology - Rome

Jupiter was one of the most important of the Roman gods, continuously evolving with Roman needs. In the early Republican era, when Rome was an agricultural city, he first appeared as an agricultural god in charge of sun and moonlight (Jupiter Lucetius), wind, rain, storms, thunder and lightning (Jupiter Elicius), sowing (Jupiter Dapalis), creative forces (Jupiter Liber) and the boundary stones of fields (Jupiter Terminus). He is depicted as a bearded old naked man holding ...

See also:

JupiterMythology, JupiterMythology - Rome, JupiterMythology - Greek, JupiterMythology - Indian, JupiterMythology - Ammon

Read more here: » JupiterMythology: Encyclopedia II - JupiterMythology - Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia II - Fra Angelico - Rome

In 1445, after the success of these works he was invited by the pope to Rome. The pope who reigned from 1431 to 1447 was Eugenius IV, and he appointed another Dominican friar, a colleague of Angelico, to be archbishop of Florence in 1445. If the story (first told by Vasari) is true—that this appointment was made at the suggestion of Angelico only after the archbishopric had been offered to him, and declined by him on the grounds of his inaptitude for s ...

See also:

Fra Angelico, Fra Angelico - Biography, Fra Angelico - Early works, Fra Angelico - Rome, Fra Angelico - Cause for canonization

Read more here: » Fra Angelico: Encyclopedia II - Fra Angelico - Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Rome

Stukley allied with Fitzmaurice and moved to Rome in 1575, where he walked about the streets and churches barefoot and bare legged (which caused the lord deputy of Ireland, Sir William Fitzwilliam, to write sarcastically of his holiness, remarking that it caused the people of Waterford where he had put on a similar performance while awaiting favourable winds for five weeks prior to his departure to believe in his piety). In June, he had an interview at Naples with Don John, when he gave details of the plans hatched with the pope for an Octob ...

See also:

Thomas Stukley, Thomas Stukley - Early Life, Thomas Stukley - Career, Thomas Stukley - Ireland, Thomas Stukley - Spain, Thomas Stukley - Rome, Thomas Stukley - Invasion Expedition, Thomas Stukley - Legacy, Thomas Stukley - Footnotes

Read more here: » Thomas Stukley: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia II - Rome - Transportation

Rome has an intercontinental airport named Leonardo Da Vinci International Airport - FCO, but more commonly known as Fiumicino, which also is Italy's chief airport, and the Giovan-Battista Pastine international airport (commonly referred to as Ciampino Airport), a joint civilian and military airport southeast of the city-center, along the Via Appia, which handles mainly charter flights and regional European flights including some low-cost airlines. A third airport, called Aeroporto dell'Urbe, is located in the north of the city along the anc ...

See also:

Rome, Rome - History, Rome - Demographics, Rome - Economy, Rome - Transportation, Rome - Education, Rome - Monuments and sights, Rome - Houses of worship, Rome - Churches, Rome - Administrative subdivision of Rome, Rome - Province of Rome, Rome - Markets and shopping areas, Rome - Porta Portese, Rome - Campo de' Fiori, Rome - Symbols and trivia, Rome - Events, Rome - Cultural Events, Rome - White Night

Read more here: » Rome: Encyclopedia II - Rome - Transportation

Rome: Encyclopedia - Catacombs of Rome

The Catacombs of Rome are ancient Christian underground burial places near Rome, Italy. Etruscans used to bury their dead in underground chambers. Christians revived the practice because they did not want to cremate their dead due to their belief in bodily resurrection. Hence they began to bury their dead, first in simple graves and sometimes in burial vaults of pro-Christian patricians. The first large-scale catacombs were excavated from the 2nd century onwards. Originally they were carved through soft rock outside the ...

Read more here: » Catacombs of Rome: Encyclopedia - Catacombs of Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia - Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew out of the city-state of Rome, founded on the Italian peninsula in the 8th century BCE. During its twelve-century existence, the Roman civilization shifted from a monarchy to an oligarchic republic to a vast empire. It came to dominate Western Europe and the entire area surrounding the Mediterranean Sea through conquest and assimilation, but eventually succumbed to barbarian invasions in the 5th century, marking the decline of the ...

Including:

Read more here: » Ancient Rome: Encyclopedia - Ancient Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia - Club of Rome

The Club of Rome is a global think tank that deals with a variety of international political issues. Club of Rome - Introduction. The Club of Rome was founded in April 1968 by Aurelio Peccei, an Italian scholar and industrialist, and Alexander King, a Scottish scientist. The Club of Rome raised considerable public attention with its report The Limits to Growth, which has sold 30 million copies in more than 30 translations making it the best selling environment book in world history. The ...

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Read more here: » Club of Rome: Encyclopedia - Club of Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia - Culture of ancient Rome

Ancient Roman culture evolved throughout the almost 1300-year history of that civilization. The term refers to the culture of the Roman Republic, later the Roman Empire, which, at peak, covered an area from Cumbria and Morocco to the Euphrates. Life in ancient Rome revolved around the city of Rome, located on seven hills, and its monumental structures like the Colosseum, the Forum of Trajan and the Pantheon. The city also had several theaters and gymnasiums, and many taverns, baths and brothels. Throughout the territory under t ...

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Read more here: » Culture of ancient Rome: Encyclopedia - Culture of ancient Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia - Council of Rome

The Council of Rome was a meeting of Western church officials and theologians which took place in 382 under the authority of Pope Damasus I. The previous year, the Emperor Theodosius I had appointed the "dark horse" candidate Nectarius Patriarch of Constantinople. The Bishops of the West opposed the election result and asked for a common synod of East and West to settle the succession of the see of Constantinople, and so the Emperor Theodosius, soon after the close of the second council of Constantinople, summoned the Imperial bishops ...

Including:

Read more here: » Council of Rome: Encyclopedia - Council of Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia - Bishop of Rome

Bishop of Rome is an ecclesiastical office and title of the Patriarch of Rome, the Pope. The first Patriarch of Rome to bear the title of "Pope" was Boniface III in 607, the first to assume the title of "Universal Bishop" by decree of Emperor Phocas. Earlier Bishops of Rome are customarily extended the title Pope as a courtesy, except in strict historical discourse. The title "Bishop of Rome" is also used in preference to Pope by some members of Eastern Orthodox denominations, to reflect their rejec ...

Read more here: » Bishop of Rome: Encyclopedia - Bishop of Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia - List of Ancient Rome-related topics

This is a List of Ancient Rome-related topics, that aims to include aspects of both the Ancient Roman Republic and Roman Empire. For an overview of the subject, see Ancient Rome. For other articles not listed below, see Category:Ancient Rome and its subcategories. An index of important figures in Ancient Rome can be found in List of ancient Romans. The topics in this list cover the culture, society and history of the ancient Roman Republic and the ...

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Read more here: » List of Ancient Rome-related topics: Encyclopedia - List of Ancient Rome-related topics

Rome: Encyclopedia II - History of Rome - Ancient Rome

History of Rome - Origins. Further information: Founding of Rome, and [[]], and [[]], and [[]], and See also:

History of Rome, History of Rome - Ancient Rome, History of Rome - Origins, History of Rome - Early peoples of Italy, History of Rome - Etruscan dominance, History of Rome - Roman Republic, History of Rome - Roman Empire, History of Rome - Medieval Rome, History of Rome - Barbarian and Byzantine rule, History of Rome - Holy Roman Empire, History of Rome - Roman Commune, History of Rome - Boniface VIII and the Babylonian captivity, History of Rome - Cola di Rienzo and the Pope's return to Rome, History of Rome - Modern Rome, History of Rome - Renaissance Rome, History of Rome - Sack of Rome and Counter-Reformation, History of Rome - Italian unification, History of Rome - Current state

Read more here: » History of Rome: Encyclopedia II - History of Rome - Ancient Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia II - Founding of Rome - The name of Rome

The name of the town is generally considered to refer to Romulus, but there are other hypotheses. Some have suggested an Etruscan word, "rhome", meaning "hard". Another one of them refers it to Roma, who should have been the daughter of Aeneas or Evandrus. Current studies seem to prefer a provenance from an Indo-European root meaning "river"; Rome would then mean "the town on the river". The Basque scholar Manuel de Larramendi thought that the origin was the Basque w ...

See also:

Founding of Rome, Founding of Rome - Latium and central Italy, Founding of Rome - The legend, Founding of Rome - Aeneas and Julus, Founding of Rome - Gods and priestesses, Founding of Rome - Romulus and Remus, Founding of Rome - Evolution of the legend, Founding of Rome - The date of the founding of Rome, Founding of Rome - The name of Rome, Founding of Rome - External link

Read more here: » Founding of Rome: Encyclopedia II - Founding of Rome - The name of Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia II - History of Rome - Medieval Rome

History of Rome - Barbarian and Byzantine rule. In 476, the last Western Roman emperor Romulus Augustus, a puppet (like almost all emperors of this period) in the hands of a general, his father Orestes, was deposed by a riot of barbarian troops led by Odoacer and exiled to Naples. The fall of the Western Roman Empire had little impact on Rome. Odoacer and later the Ostrogoths continued, like the last emperors, to rule Italy from Ravenna. Meanwhile, the Senate, even though long since stripped of wider powers, cont ...

See also:

History of Rome, History of Rome - Ancient Rome, History of Rome - Origins, History of Rome - Early peoples of Italy, History of Rome - Etruscan dominance, History of Rome - Roman Republic, History of Rome - Roman Empire, History of Rome - Medieval Rome, History of Rome - Barbarian and Byzantine rule, History of Rome - Holy Roman Empire, History of Rome - Roman Commune, History of Rome - Boniface VIII and the Babylonian captivity, History of Rome - Cola di Rienzo and the Pope's return to Rome, History of Rome - Modern Rome, History of Rome - Renaissance Rome, History of Rome - Sack of Rome and Counter-Reformation, History of Rome - Italian unification, History of Rome - Current state

Read more here: » History of Rome: Encyclopedia II - History of Rome - Medieval Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia II - Ancient Rome - Society

Life in ancient Rome revolved around the city of Rome, located on seven hills. The city had a vast number of monumental structures like the Colosseum, the Forum of Trajan and the Pantheon. It had fountains with fresh drinking-water supplied by hundreds of miles of aqueducts, theaters, gymnasium (ancient Greece)s, bath complexes complete with libraries and shops, marketplaces, and functional sewers. Throughout the territory under the control of ancient Rome, residential architecture ranged from very modest houses to country villas, and in the ...

See also:

Ancient Rome, Ancient Rome - History, Ancient Rome - Monarchy, Ancient Rome - Republic, Ancient Rome - Empire, Ancient Rome - Society, Ancient Rome - Government, Ancient Rome - Law, Ancient Rome - Economy, Ancient Rome - Class structure, Ancient Rome - Family, Ancient Rome - Education, Ancient Rome - Culture, Ancient Rome - Language, Ancient Rome - Art literature and music, Ancient Rome - Games and activities, Ancient Rome - Religion, Ancient Rome - Technology, Ancient Rome - Engineering and architecture, Ancient Rome - Military, Ancient Rome - Notes

Read more here: » Ancient Rome: Encyclopedia II - Ancient Rome - Society

Rome: Encyclopedia II - Rioni of Rome - The Ancient Rome

The rioni were established for the first time in the 4th century BC by Servius Tullius: they were only four and they were called regiones (the plural of regio). Then, during the Imperial ages, Augustus increased their number to 14: they were all on the same side of the river Tiber but one, Transtiberim (the modern Trastevere). They were (see 14 regions of the Augustan Rome): Porta Capena Caelimontium Isis et Serapis Templum Pacis Esqui ...

See also:

Rioni of Rome, Rioni of Rome - The Ancient Rome, Rioni of Rome - The Middle Ages, Rioni of Rome - The Modern ages, Rioni of Rome - Today, Rioni of Rome - Logos of the modern rioni

Read more here: » Rioni of Rome: Encyclopedia II - Rioni of Rome - The Ancient Rome

Rome: Encyclopedia II - New Rome - In Fiction

In the 1959 post-apocalyptic science fiction novel A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Michael Miller, Jr., first published in 1959, the residence of the post-nuclear holocaust Pope is called New Rome. In the sequel Saint Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman, New Rome was revealed to have been founded on the site of St. Louis, Missouri. Nova Roma is the name of a fictional country of the Marvel Universe, first appearing in New Mutants #8 (October, 1983). The comic book was written by Chris Claremont ...

See also:

New Rome, New Rome - New Rome in the East, New Rome - Byzantium, New Rome - Moscow as the Third Rome, New Rome - New Rome in the West, New Rome - The Third Rome in Rome, New Rome - In Fiction, New Rome - Reference

Read more here: » New Rome: Encyclopedia II - New Rome - In Fiction

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Rome
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