One of the day trips we took from Rome was to Ostia Antica, the harbor city of Ancient Rome. We heard it was like a little Pompeii, but easier to get to, so we opted to go see it. I am so glad we did.
You can get there using Rome's Public Transportation so after 1 train change and about a 30 minute ride we had arrived for a day of exploring (and it only cost one metro ticket to get there)!
We started out by going through the museum there and saw the better preserved sculptures and artwork and then began to make our way through the ruins.
We were surprised to see people sitting and hanging out in the "rooms" of the ruins we walked by at first, being used to the cool parts of ruins being roped or blocked off, and then we discovered that Ostia Antica is awesome (Awesome Antica) and you can walk pretty much anywhere you want!
Want to walk through that doorway? Sure! Go up those stairs? Go ahead! Climb into this little hole or down into that tunnel? Why not! It was so fun.
It was great to be able to really walk through the ruins instead of just peeking into them from behind the rope or looking down on them from above like those in the main city. We were actually surprised at how well preserved they were considering people have free reign to explore as they wish.
I guess our
attention spans aren't quite long enough to stay on track. Or we're free
spirits. We'll go with free spirits. Anyway on one of our detours
(in actuality it was probably a detour of a detour haha) we came across this
awesome find, an underground walkway with a statue in it looking into a
skylight above. It was fascinating. No sign, no markings at all, just some incognito stairs in the ground. I
bet most people totally miss it, it was like finding treasure. The treasure of Awesoma Antica.
So we spent the day exploring the place and here are some of my favorite pics from our Ostia Antica adventure:
The merchants would advertise their goods with mosaics outside their stalls on the floor. So you can walk by all the old mosaics and see what used to be sold there. We found the elephant for mom where they used to sell ivory and exotic animals (this was one part where our handy dandy guide was actually used, so again, thanks Rick Steves)!
No comments:
Post a Comment