[세계테마기행] Italy Part 1 – Rome

by times news cr
Economy Queen Reporter Park Yu-mi Photo provided by EBS World Theme Travel

‘World Theme Travel – Complete Conquest! Part 1 of ‘Italy’, ‘All Roads Lead to Rome’, will be broadcast on EBS1 TV at 8:40 pm today (23rd).

A more in-depth and new way to travel to Italy, taught by an Italian nationally certified guide!

Rome, the legacy of a brilliant empire
Venice, a city of water built on a swampy area
The Dolomites, a paradise on two feet
Tuscany, the countryside you want to stay in

A journey to discover unfamiliar beauty in familiar travel destinations!
Let’s meet the new Italy!

A very special, slightly personal trip following the recommendations of Lim Seong-il, a nationally certified Italian guide with 12 years of experience! The first journey begins in Roma. Rome is the current capital of Italy and also the name of an ancient empire from the 8th century BC. The Appian Way (Via Appia Antica), which played a decisive role in the Roman Empire’s rise to power as the center of the world, is called ‘humanity’s first highway.’ Rome, a city where it was possible to eat a hamburger on the street 2,000 years ago.

Pass by Colle Aventine, one of the origins of Rome, and head to a cafe where you can take in a panoramic view of the city. Behind the Monumento Nazionale a Vittorio Emanuele II, also known as the ‘Altar of the Fatherland’, is a nameless cafe, but it is already famous among locals. This place is not yet well-known to Korean travelers, but curator Lim Seong-il strongly recommends it.

Travel tips and knowledge from Italian experts are revealed, such as local ‘delicious restaurants’ where you can eat Thalian home-cooked food with the taste of your grandmother’s cooking, and how to enjoy the Trevi Fountain (Fontana di Trevi), which is so famous but has never been seen before. A trip to Rome.
The beautiful cathedrals scattered throughout the city offer a glimpse into truly ancient and medieval Rome. San Pietro in Vincoli, where the chains that bound Saint Peter are enshrined, and Basilica di Santa Maria in Cosmedin, where the ashes of Saint Valentine, the origin of Valentine’s Day, rest. The divine beauty felt in the Pantheon explodes with shock and wonder. Hadrian, who built the Pantheon, was an emperor who admired architecture and travel, and even built his own utopia, Villa Adriana, in Tivoli, near Rome. The Roman Empire far surpassed modern technology and imagination. Let’s follow the immortal traces.

Economy Queen Reporter Park Yu-mi Photo provided by EBS World Theme Travel

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