
Rome
Rome, founded according to tradition in 753 BCE, was the capital of an empire for two thousand years and the centre of Western Christianity for the two millennia that followed; this continuity gives the city its singular historical depth. The Colosseum, inaugurated in 80 CE under Titus, held up to fifty thousand spectators and remains the largest amphitheatre of the ancient world. The Pantheon, rebuilt under Hadrian around 126, has been in continuous use ever since; its unreinforced concrete dome, with an interior diameter of 43.3 metres, is still the largest of its kind in the world. The Vatican, the world's smallest independent state at 44 hectares, holds the Sistine Chapel vault painted by Michelangelo between 1508 and 1512 and the Baroque square designed by Bernini before St Peter's. Trastevere, a formerly working-class district on the west bank of the Tiber, has kept through its trattorias the most relaxed face of the city. The Spanish Steps, built in 1725 thanks to the bequest of a Florentine banker, open onto Via Condotti, the Roman axis of the great Italian fashion houses.








