You cannot go to Rome and not see Piazza di Spagna with its Spanish Steps (Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti), which with its 135 steps seems to climb to the sky. Wonderful setting for fashion shows and famous star of many films, the Spanish Steps is known and loved around the world.
The Thermae Antoninianae or Terme of Caracalla were the most important spa resort of antiquity. Built in the southern part of Rome at the behest of Caracalla, their construction began in 212 A.D and ended in 217 A.D with the support of Severus Alexander.
Full of charm and history, Campo de’ Fiori is one of the most famous squares in Rome. It has a double soul: the morning is a popular market where resound the voices of the Romans who sell fruits and vegetables; in the evening it is a lively square, especially by tourists, attracted by the cafes…
Historic square of political events, especially the Left, Piazza del Popolo (People’s Square) is also one of the most popular squares by the Romans.
The Imperial Fora are an archaeological complex located on Via dei Fori Imperiali, the road that leads from the Piazza Venezia to the Colosseum.
Palazzo Farnese dominates the famous Piazza Farnese, adorned with twin fountains by Girolamo Rainaldi and on which stands the Swedish national church of St. Bridget.
The history of Castel Sant’Angelo is closely linked to that of Rome: the constant changes, poverty and wealth of the city are invariably reflected in the imposing structure that since almost two thousand years rests on the placid waters of the Tiber.
The street named after Emperor Frederick I of Prussia is one of the main streets of the city in which, despite the change imposed by time and history, the past continues to reverberate.
Potsdamer Platz is not a simple square but is one of the emblematic places of Berlin.
The Berlin’s Champs-Elysées: the long boulevard “Unter den Linden” which echoes over four centuries of history.