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Rome - Along the tiber
The island is connected to the
mainland by two bridges: the
Cestio, connecting it with the
Trastevere bank, and the
Fabricio, or Ponte dei Quattro
Capi, which was built in 62
B.C. and is the oldest bridge
in Rome which has arrived to us
practically intact. From the
island it is also possible to
see a third bridge, the Ponte
Rotto, which collapsed in the
late 16th century. In the past
the Ponte Fabricio was called
Ponte dei Giudei (Bridge of
Jews) The term Ghetto is used to indicate the quarter lying between Monte dei Cenci and the Theatre of Marcellus, lying entirely within the Sant'Angelo district. It was founded by Pope Paul IV Carafa in 1555, and abolished only in 1870, with the end of the Church State. It was surrounded by a wall in which there were three gates, opened in the morning and closed at dusk. In an area of approximately three hectares, in the 17th century around 9,000 inhabitants lived there in frightful sanitary conditions. The Ghetto faces onto the Lungotevere Cenci with the monumental building of the Synagogue, built in 1904, today also the seat of the Israelite Museum of the Jewish Community of Rome. Behind the Synagogue runs the Via del Portico d'Ottavia, which owes its name to the ruins of the ancient portico built at the end of the 1st century B.C. by the Emperor Augustus for his sister. Inside part of the monument stands the church of Sant'Angelo in Pescheria, so-called in reference to the important fish market held here from the Middle Ages up to the end of the 19th century. The stone tablet used in the market to remind customers of the obligation to give the Municipal Magistrates the heads of any fish whose length was longer than that of the tablet itself is still there. The church of Sant'Angelo was
one of the four churches where
Jews had to go every Saturday
with the obligation of
listening to the sermons aiming
to convert them. It was
possible to avoid doing so by
paying a fine, but more often
the Jews preferred to fill
their ears with wax! Today the
Ghetto is one of the zones of
Rome which, more than any
other, has kept the
physiognomy, aromas, and
flavours of the old city: for a
taste of the specialities of
authentic Roman and Jewish
cooking - carciofi alla giudia
(crisp-fried whole artichokes),
filetti di baccalà
(fried fillets of salted cod),
coda alla vaccinara (braised
oxtail butcher style) - we
recommend the trattorias
Giggetto, at Via del Portico
d'Ottavia 21a/22 (tel.
06-6861105), and Al Pompiere,
at Via Santa Maria dei
Calderari 38 (06 6868377). Also
make a stop at Boccione, Via
del Portico d'Ottavia 1, for
cakes, pastries, Discovering Rome: 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11-12 ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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