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INFO BOX
Rome is one of the most visited cities in the World.In 2005 it welcomed more than 18 million of tourists.
 
Number of Hotels
5 stars: 21 hotels
4 stars: 160 hotels
3 stars: 314 hotels
Number of Hotel Rooms
5 stars: 3.244 rooms
4 stars: 18.179 rooms
3 stars: 13.604 rooms
Airports
Fiumicino L. da Vinci:
116 airlines, more than 140 destinations
Ciampino:
12 airlines, 35 destinations

Italian Travel Team ROMA
Italian Travel Team
Italian Travel Team The origin of the city's name is unknown, with several theories already circulating in Antiquity; the least likely is derived from Greek Ρώμη meaning braveness, courage; more probably the connection is with a root *rum-, "teat", with possible reference to the totem wolf (Latin lupa, a word also meaning "prostitute") that gave suck to the cognately-named twins Romulus and Remus.
According to a legend, the city of Rome was founded by twins, Romulus and Remus. Their father was Mars, the god of war, and their mother was a Latin princes: Rea Silvia. The Latin King took the infants and put them in a basket. He abandoned them on the banks of the Tiber River. The King was afraid the twins might try to take his throne, so he left them to die.
A female wolf found the twins and fed them her own milk. Finally some shepherds rescued the twins and raised them as their own children. After growing up the boys decided to build a city in the place where they had been born. Each brother decided to rule one part of the city. They each chose a hill from which to rule the new city.
Italian Travel Team
A thousand years ago Rome was one of the most important cities in the world. A legend tells of the city being formed by twin brothers, Romulus and Remus, who were abandoned at birth and raised by a wolf. When the twins grew up, they decided to build a city where they had been abandoned. Remus and Romulus argued over the boundaries of this city. Romulus, in a rage, killed Remus. After Remus's death the city was named Rome after Romulus who ruled the city.

Whether the legend is based on facts can't be determined. Scholars know the city of Rome began as a small village around 753 B. C. The early settlers made a living by farming. Gradually the village grew into a city. It was ruled by kings. In 509 B. C. the citizens decided the city would no longer be ruled by kings. They elected two consuls to rule. The villagers began to conquer the surrounding territory and the city grew. By 250 B. C. the Romans ruled all of Italy.

In 206 B. C. the Romans built a fleet of ships to fight the Carthaginians of North Africa. The Romans won causing the Carthaginians to move to Spain. One Carthaginian soldier named Hannibal led an army against Rome. He used elephants to cross the Alps from Spain to attack the Romans. Hannibal won many battles, but the Romans finally defeated him by cutting off his food supply.

In 204 B. C. the Romans attacked Carthage. Hannibal tried to defend his homeland, but he was defeated. The Romans completely destroyed Carthage and killed many citizens.

Rome became a very powerful city by 100 B. C. Government officials became greedy and corrupt. Some demanded huge taxes from the Romans. Civil war broke out when two generals tried to take the power. In 73 B. C. a slave named Spartacus led a revolt. He escaped to Mount Vesuvius and gathered an army of 90,000 slaves. He fought the Roman army until he was killed in 71 B. C.


Italian Travel Team

Caesar and Pompey struggled to control the government. Caesar defeated Pompey's army and Pompey escaped to Egypt. He was murdered there. Caesar went to Egypt to help Queen Cleopatra keep her throne. After several conquests he returned to Rome.
In 45 B. C. Caesar became the sole ruler of Rome. He planned improvements for Rome. Before he could carry out these plans Caesar was murdered in 44 B.C. After this there was struggle for power between Mark Antony and Octavian, Caesar's heir. Octavian became Rome's first emperor of Rome when Mark Antony and his wife, Cleopatra, killed themselves rather than be defeated. Octavian changed his name to Augustus. Augustus built up the Roman army. With this force, he was able to conquer surrounding territories increasing the Roman Empire.

In 117 A. D. Hadrian became emperor. He strengthened the frontiers and built a stone wall across northern Britain to keep out intruders. In Judea the Roman army stopped a revolt led by the Jews. They killed thousands of people.

The Roman Empire began to rule over the entire Mediterranean world including most of Europe and parts of East and North Africa by the second century A. D. Barbarians attacked northern Italy, but were defeated.

In the third century the army controlled the government. Generals were often chosen as emperors. The empire was too big to control. This led to many civil wars. With the weakened state, the Persians began to regain the land they had earlier lost.

Soldiers posted across the empire learned of new religions. One was Christianity. The emperors blamed the Christians for the troubles the empire was having. The Romans killed many Christians because of this.

In 284 A. D. Diocletian was elected emperor by his troops. He divided the empire into the eastern and western halves. This helped the empire to be easier to control. Still the empire did not have enough funds to build the army they needed to protect their immense boundaries.

In 320 A. D. Emperor Constantine made Christianity the state religion. He moved the capital, and named it Constantinople after himself. There he ruled the eastern half of the empire.

Barbarians attacked the western empire. In 410 A. D. they destroyed Rome. In 476 a barbarian became the ruler of Italy. Constantinople was able to hold off the barbarians until it was captured by the Turks in 1453. This empire was so great that the influence of the Romans can still be seen today.

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