Caesar's Rome: Travel Details
This is a quick and handy source for details on the sights, hotels, tour guides and restaurants featured in the "Caesar's Rome" show. For much more (and updates), see this year's edition of Rick Steves' Rome guidebook.
Mamertine Prison
This 2,500-year-old, cistern-like prison, which once held the bodies of Saints Peter and Paul, is worth a look (donation requested, daily 9:00–19:00, at the foot of Capitol Hill, near Forum's Arch of Septimius Severus). When you step into the room, you'll hit a modern floor. Ignore that and look up at the hole in the ceiling, from which prisoners were lowered. Then take the stairs down to the level of the actual prison floor. Downstairs, you'll see the column to which Peter was chained. It's said that a miraculous fountain sprang up in this room so that Peter could convert and baptize his jailers, who were also subsequently martyred. The upside-down cross commemorates Peter's upside-down crucifixion.
Tom Rankin
If you're interested in weeklong classes on Rome, look into the American Institute for Roman Culture — an innovative, educational organization run by Tom Rankin and his colleague, archaeologist Darius Arya (www.romanculture.org).
The Appian Way
Since the fourth century B.C., this has been Rome's gateway to the East. The wonder of its day, the Appian Way was the largest, widest, fastest road ever, called the "Queen of Roads." Eventually, this most important of Roman roads stretched 430 miles to the port of Brindisi — where boats sailed for Greece and Egypt.
Tourist's Appian Way: The road starts less than two miles south of the Colosseum at the massive San Sebastian Gate. The Museum of the Walls, located at the gate, offers an interesting look at Roman defense and a chance to scramble along a stretch of the ramparts (€2.60, Tue–Sat 9:00–19:00, Sun 9:00–14:00, closed Mon, tel. 06-7047-5284).