Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Trastevere and the Gianicolo

On Wednesday, September 11th, we said goodbye to our terrace overlooking the sea, and Roberto was kind enough to drive us down to Amalfi, where we bought some sandwiches for the train ride, and caught the ferry back to Salerno.




There, we caught the train to Rome Termini, where we got a taxi to Trastevere, to the Piazza in Piscinula.  From there, we walked a block to our B&B, Arco del Lauro.  This was very nice, except that early that evening, the toilet flush mechanism, which had been partly inoperative, completely broke, and they couldn't get it fixed that night, so we had a choice between letting the toilet run constantly, or turning it off entirely.  We alternated between the two, as need required.



But first, we did some sightseeing.  The woman at Arco del Lauro had suggested gelato at a gelataria on the Tiber Island, so we went there--very good.  On the island, we also visited the Church of San Bartolomeo, which had a number of shrines to modern martyrs.


The woman at Arco del Lauro had also suggested going up the Gianicolo (Janiculum) hill, to the Garibaldi statue, for the view.  On the way there, we stopped in at Santa Maria in Trastevere, believed to be the very first church dedicated to Mary.  This was my second-favorite church of the whole trip (first, again, being the Duomo in Ravello).











We continued up the Gianicolo, taking the shortcut up the steps to San Pietro in Montorio, then past the Acqua Paola fountain (under repair), and eventually finding our way up to the Piazza Garibaldi, with its equestrian statue of the hero and a terrace giving a view over the city.  From another side, the dome of St. Peter's was visible. Then we headed back to our room. 

We had dinner at a restaurant, Dar Sor Olimpio al Drago, with a lot of Guide Routard stickers in the window--to Mary Joy an even more infallible evidence of restaurant quality than a Lonely Planet recommendation. Very good.







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