D
epart
from
Rome
with your guide passing the old
Ostiense
Gate, the ancient city walls erected
by Emperor Aurelian
in 270 AD and the huge marble Pyramid
of Caio Cestius
dating
from 1st century BC. After 12 miles
reach Ostia Antica Excavations
situated at the mouth of the
River
Tiber
on
the Mediterranean coast and visit
the maritime port of ancient Rome.
Only rediscovered in the 19th century
and excavated largely form 1920s
to 1940s, Ostia was founded probably
in the 7th century BC for salt extraction
from marshy swamps but later in
the 4th century BC it became a military
and naval port protecting the Tiber
access to Rome. With Rome's growing
power it turned into a thriving
and vital commercial port
which for centuries imported wheat,
grain, foodstuffs, luxurious exotic
goods, spices, multicoloured marbles,
Egyptian obelisks and innumerable
wild animals for the amphitheatre
games from Africa and Asia. The
inhabitants were traders, shipbuilders,
mariners, warehouse workmen, slaves,
public officials and wealthy patrician
families all busily engaged in intensive
commerce and transportation over
sea, river and land. Many of the
freedman and slaves were of different
origins, languages and religions:
Greeks, Phoenicians, Iberians, Gallic,
Egyptians, Fri
sians
and recently a
Synagogue
dating from 1st century BC was unearthed.
The superb typical Mediterranean
setting of the excavations, covered
with majestic umbrella-pines and
cypresses, is as fascinating as
Pompeii but without crowds
and just 20 minutes out of Rome.
34 hectares have been excavated
from the time it suddenly became
a ghost town when an epochal flood
changed the course of the Tiber.
With intriguing and entertaining
explanations recounted by your erudite
guide you will experience how life
was in this ancient sea-port, discovering
various types of dwellings and tenement-flats
(insulae) of the middle and lower
classes and visit residences of
the wealthy during your stroll
along the network of intact streets.
Explore the interiors of temples,
roman baths, shops, mills, taverns
and public cloakrooms all with vivid
mosaic floors, frescoed walls,
stuccoed decorations and statues,
rendering to the traveller a full
idea of the teeming frenetic life
of the port. Return to Rome by swift
highway. 3 hour duration.