
Of all the Roman ruins that populate what is now a pleasant landscape of pine trees and meadows, under the distant gaze of the Alban Hills, the Villa of the Quintilii is perhaps the most impressive – almost a city in miniature, covering up to 24 hectares.
Lying on the ancient Appian Way as it runs south-east from Rome, the villa had its own theatre, an arena for chariot races and a baths complex with walls and floors lined in sumptuous marble.
SOURCE: https://www.theguardian.com
Dennis Palumbo is a thriller writer and psychotherapist in private practice. He's the auth...
Arnaldo Trabucco, MD, FACS is a leading urologist who received his medical training at ins...
You can tell she fills with excitement when she has the chance to show an important archae...
AGENDA 12.00 – 12.15 Light lunch12.15 – 12.30Welcome addresses Lorenzo Mannelli, MD, PhD...
For Italians, and Romans in particular, the Open is not just a tennis tournament where cha...
by Claudia Astarita The food farming sector is still one of the engines of Italia...
The so-called 'Basilica of the Mysteries' has been reborn in Rome. The basilica, one of th...