Fr. Choppin at the Archives |
Then we went to an adjoining building to see the Vatican Library. Also amazing, also great reading rooms, also ancient books. We saw a manuscript in Greek of the bible. I don't even know how old that was. Hand-copied. And on the 4th floor, this room totally abandoned, for the moment, that was covered, COVERED! In frescos. All library pictures. Amazing.
A Reading Room at the Vatican Library
Miles and miles of shelves |
AND we saw the door that connects this area to the Pope's palace. I did get a picture of that. To think what's on the other side of that door. Just amazing.
the door to the Pope's apartment |
Then I window shopped on the way back. Took the metro back to the hotel like a pro. Met friends for dinner at our place, Li Rioni, the pizza place down the street, where they greeted us like old friends. I had pizza napoleta, which is pizza with anchovies! Yummy!! 1/2 liter of wine there is 4€, which is about $5.20. Can't beat that!
3 comments:
Wow, what amazing things you got to see. Your tour was definitely a once in a lifetime experience. Was the door to the Pope's palace really fancy or just a plain old door?
Susanne, the door was just a very old wooden door--totally not fancy at all. I can't wait to show you and Kevin my pictures from the trip! Do either of you know of this tower in the Archives where Galileo worked? It has some sort of geometric figure on the floor and a tiny hole in the wall where sunlight comes in at exact spots on the design on the floor? I have to find out the name of it. I saw pictures for sale of the room, but we didn't have time to stop.
I have not seen that door. The exhibit you sent looks really amazing. The depth of history of the Catholic Church is mind-boggling, and combine that with Rome, and wow.
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