Some questions about Rome (UK person visiting late April)? |
Hi, thanks for looking.
As the question says, I am spending some time in Rome at the end of April. I'm going for a work conference, but I have the option of adding a few days holiday ... |
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Can anyone tell me the name of this Chapel in Rome? |
| Hi we have recently returned from a visit to the historic City of Rome where we saw many interesting things. I am trying to find out the name of a particular chapel so I can do some more research on ... |
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What are some decent, yet inexpensive, hotels in Rome? |
That are sort of in the center of things? Maybe not in the center, but you are able to get to all the major attractions pretty easily from it.....
Thank you! Additional Details<... |
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I'm going to Italy this Summer, Any Place that I just have to go? |
| I love art. Thats the main reason i'm going. If theres anything you know about that is really cool, let me know. I don't mean things like the vatican museums, i already know about all ... |
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Where is the best place to visit in Italy? |
| I know there is Rome and Venice...We want to get a nice authentic feel of Italy when we go, not a tourist vacation.... |
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Whats your favorite part of living in Italy? |
| I'm thinking of moving to Italy one day. If you currently live there, what is your favorite thing about living there? What is bad about living there?... |
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How is the weather In Italy the first two weeks in July? |
to be more specific, Rome, Naples, Amalfi Coast, Florence, Venice & Milan. Additional Details Will it get to the 90 or higher in rome, Florence, Venice, Naple and Milan. Does it ... |
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Train schedule in Italy? |
between Venice and Florence
Florence and R... |
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I am looking for a family friendly trip to Italy? |
| I have 4 children, ages 17, 14, 13, and 10. We will be traveling spring, '08. Is this a good time to go to Italy? Should we book a trip with a travel agency, like a guided tour, or is there a ... |
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There are many native born Italians who have chosen to live in the U.S. I would like to know what the main? |
| motive was for their choice. My sense is that economics and job opportunities were their main reasons, however, I wonder if it is worth giving up such a superior quality of life that Italy provides?<... |
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Questions about Italy..? |
for 1st timers with no italian skills, where is better? rome, florence, Venice? we are planning on going in January of next year, what is the weather like?
Should we rent an apartment for a week?... |
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trmktr |
Italy tour? |
i will go to italy in january, to my friend's home in Bari. my plane arrives to and departs from rome, so i thought maybe i'll have a trip to north italy. but i only have 3 days to visit north. can i visit venice, rome and florence in this short time?
p.s : i will use trains for transportation, but if you have any better advices, please write over here. thanks anyway! |
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conley39
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Three days is not enough time to visit Rome, Florence and Venice. You could get to each city in that time, but you'd have very little time to see anything. You're better off spending your time in Rome and taking the time to explore a bit. A reasonable alternative is to spend two days in Rome and a day in Florence. The travel time on the train is a little more than an hour and a half if you take the Eurostar - it's more expensive, but more comfortable and faster. Taking an intercity train adds an hour to the trip; the regional trains take about 2 hours longer.
Florence to Venice is another 3 hours on the train.
It's an 8 to 10 hour trip from Bari to Venice. If you're thinking of taking the train from Venice to Rome to get your plane, that would be a 4.5 to 5 hour trip. |
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leynard
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3 Days?!?
maybe It's not Enough... but it's possible
...rome-florence tooks 1:30 hours by train, florence-venice tooks 3 hours by train....
if you are <25/30 i advice you to enjoy florence or venice by night...and book your hotel in florence or venice.... by the way florence is cheaper than venice, even if florence is not that cheap..then i advice you to book the hotel in florence
4 the guy below me ---don't cut and paste... lira doesn't even exist anymore... in italy, there is the euro now, and 1 euro = 1,5 dollars |
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.oOEmMINAvaganteOo.
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Venice, Rome and Florence are so full of things to see! I think you won't have the time to visit all of them. If I were you I'd choose only one of them, beacuse it's really impossible to do in other ways. I suggest you Florence (where I live :D): in this city you can find everything you like visiting, as you know it's full of beautiful monuments and museums (you absolutely have to see the Uffizi), there are also lots of shops and pubs. And, trust me, the countryside around is fantastic. I also suggest you to go to "Piazzale Michelangelo", from there you can see all the city.
If you're travelling by train remember that if you don't want to spend much time on the train you will have to buy a quite expensive ticket...I'm sorry!
Anyway.. take a decision and enjoy your travel! |
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adryalt
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You don t have much time but that doesn t mean you can't do it.:) I would take a plane from Bari to Venice stay there one day.Then take the train from Venice to Florence stay here all day and then leave for Rome( the distance from Florence to Rome is about 2 hour train ride and there are a lot of connections). Once in Florence I would take a tour ( they have a tour that is called hop on and off it goes around the city center and takes you to the most important monuments In rome there is the same kind of bus ( which leaves from the train station termini) Otherwise stay in Rome and get organzied tours that go to Florence( day trips) Here is a company that does these types of day trips http://www.appianline.it/
enjoy your stay in Italy |
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Lissie
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3 days is not enough to see any 1 of those places. Pick one and see it - you might as well start with Rome because as you say that is where you fly from!
Trains are a great way to get around Italy. For more Italian travel tips check out http://HowToTravelTips.com |
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wuyong_pk
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http://loosea.com/Traveling-in-Italy/
http://loosea.com/Italy-trip-report/
We are definitely talking about a warm and friendly nation here. This
nation is so friendly that the leading cause of injury is getting passionately
embraced by strangers. One time we were at a restaurant near Rome eating a
medium-sized Italian lunch consisting of enough pasta to feed Lithuania for
six months, and we happened to mention that the wine tasted good. So the
restaurant owner insisted that everybody in our party had to go see his wine
cellar, which involved climbing down a set of steep rickety stairs into the
kind of dark, dank, spider-infested basement that you often see in horror
movies, wherein some doomed character goes slowly down the stairs while
dramatic music plays in the background and the theater audience is shouting,
"DON'T GO DOWN THERE, YOU FOOL!" because they know there's a lunatic lurking
in the darkness with a machete and an industrial staple gun. This basement
was like that, only it was occupied by something even more dangerous than a
homicidal maniac, namely, numerous barrels of wine, which the restaurant owner
insisted that we had to drink many samples from, and quite frankly we wonder
how we got out of there. In fact some members of our party may still be down
there with the spiders, and we urge you to stop in and see them (the spiders)
during normal visiting hours.
Speaking of normal visiting hours, Italy doesn't have any, as far as we
can tell. Nothing is ever open when it's supposed to be open or closed when
it's supposed to be closed, nor does it cost what it's supposed to cost.
Also, the buses never seem to go where they're supposed to go. We realize
we're making a sweeping generalization here, but as Giraldus Cambrensis so
eloquently put it in Topographia Hibernica, "tough ****." Nevertheless we
urge you to spend some time in this country, although as a precautionary
measure you should lose a couple of hundred pounds first.
What to See in Italy
The major city is of course Rome, which got its name from the fact that
the Romans used to live there before the Fall of the Roman Empire. Their
mother warned them that this would happen. "If you leave your empire there,
it's going to fall!" she said, but unfortunately they did not understand
English.
Nevertheless, the Romans built many large broken objects that you should
definitely see, such as the Renaissance, the Piles of Seemingly Random Dirty
Stones, and the Colosseum, which was the site of Super Bowl I. You must also
visit Vatican City, where you may see the famous Sistine Chapel, which the
famous Anthony L. "Michael" Angelo had to paint--Believe It or Not!--while
lying on his back, because due to a contractor error the Sistine Chapel is
only 18 inches high, so comfortable clothes are recommended. The Vatican is
also the home of the Pope, who, if you pound very hard on his door, will be
happy to come out and entertain the kids by twisting balloons into hilarious
animal shapes. Elsewhere in Italy is the lovely city of Venice, which each
year attracts millions of visitors despite the fact that it is basically an
enormous open sewer; and Florence, home of one of Michael Angelo's most famous
works, the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Southern Italy is the site of the
incredible village of Pompeii, which nearly 2,000 years ago was buried under
tons of volcanic ash and is therefore invisible. We don't know why we even
brought it up.
FACTS AT A GLANCE
Unit of Currency: The Lira (1,000,000,000,000,000 lire = Nothing)
Unit of Time: "A Few Minutes" (A Few Minutes = Two Days)
Hand Gestures: Permitted
http://loosea.com/Traveling-in-Italy/
http://loosea.com/Italy-trip-report/ |
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