english

you are here: Home More About Walks in Rome - The cradle of civilization

Stay

Visit a locality browsing the menu on the left. In each Italy area you can then choose the best touristical structures we are proposing.

Most viewed in Italy

  • Chiorri Umbria Wines

    The Chiorri Winemakers Company is a vineyard under family management, which with special care from their very own vines, produces D.O.C. Colli Perugini and IGT dell'Umbria white, red and rosè wines. The family, together with the help of experienced workers,...

  • Farmhouse San Rocco Todi

    Farmhouse San Rocco, country holiday home in Umbria, Todi Summer holidays in Umbria, in Todi at Tenuta San Rocco Tenuta San Rocco has the pleasure to offer special conditions for accomodations in his flats or " casolari" You may test the tipical foods...

  • Bisol Wines Accommodation Veneto

    The first traces of Bisol family in the heart of the Prosecco D.O.C area date to the 16th century and are contained in a census carried out for fiscal reasons by the aristocratic Venetian family Da Pola, who were landowners of the leading the very prestigious...

  • Maria Caterina Dei Montepulciano Wine

    In 1964, Alibrando Dei, Maria Caterina's grandfather, bought the first part of the entire estate : Bossona. This vineyard is gorgeous for exposition and kind of soil, a sort of amphitheater always where the wind blows with a certain constancy. And her...

  • Resort Tenuta Poggio al Casone Tuscany

    Poggio al Casone is a charming resort located in a private wine farm surrounded by 40 hectares of organic vineyards. An ancient villa and two independent cottages have been meticulously renovated offering now self-catering apartments available for holidays....

Print this page Send to a friend by e-mail

Walks in Rome - The cradle of civilization

  • La_Culla_della_Civilta'.pdf
    La_Culla_della_Civilta'.pdf

  • The_Cradle_Of_Civilization.pdf
    The_Cradle_Of_Civilization.pdf

From the Forum Boarium to the Palatine

The area of the Forum Boarium is of great interest due to its association with the city's earliest beginnings, and even more important is the stretch of the Tiber now marked by the ruins of the 16th century Ponte Rotto.
There is archaeological evidence of the formation of small settlements of hut-dwellers on the Palatine and on the other hills in the Tiber plain around 1000 BC. These united during the 8th century BC, giving rise to the city of Rome. The growth of these primitive settlements, inhabited by Latins, Sabines and Etruscans, was encouraged by the possibility of expanding trade along the river.
Salt, a most precious commodity because of its use in rearing livestock and preserving meat, was panned at the mouth of the Tiber near Ostia and thence transported inland, along a route which was to become Via Salaria. However there was one principal factor which made vicinity to the river fundamental to the destinies of the groups living on the site of the Palatine and the other hills at the time and this was the ford located immediately downstream of the Tiber Island.
Later replaced by the famous Pons Sublicius, this ford joined the two main routes crossed by livestock farmers - the route which led to the Etruscan North and that leading to the Greek South, later to become known as Via Aurelia and Via Appia, respectively.
By controlling this stretch of the river close to the Tiber Island, the first Romans were able to benefit from the intense trade between the two areas and rapidly attained a position of prestige. It is no coincidence that the river bank overlooking this point was referred to as the Forum Boarium, or cattle market, right up to Imperial times.
Must See: Santa Maria in Cosmedin, la Bocca della Verità (Mouth of Truth), l' Ara Massima di Ercole (Great Altar of Unconquered Hercules), il Tempio di Ercole Vincitore (The Temple of Hercules Victor), il Tempio di Portuno (Temple of Portunus), San Giorgio in Velabro, Circus Maximus, Palatine Hill, The House of Augustus.

www.turismoroma.it

Choose language

italiano

english