Rome is a stunning city where you can find mysteries and wonders behind each corner. Walking on Via del Corso towards Piazza Venezia some churches attract the attention but one in particular represent a sacred site for the Christians and Catholics. Under Santa Maria in Via Lata Church tourists can visit the home of evangelist Luke and the prison of St Paul.
This sacred site, venerated anciently as St Luke’s home, St. Peter’s lodging place, and where “In Rome Paul was allowed to stay in lodgings of his own with the soldier who guarded him” (Ac 18,16) was in 1661 restored to the pious devotion of the faithful Pope Alexander VII.
“Paul spent the whole of the two years in his own rented lodging. He welcomed all who came to visit him, proclaiming the Kingdom of God and teaching the truth about the Lord Jesus Christ with complete freedom and without hindrance from anyone” The first century porch flanking “Via Lata “ (Broadway, today’s Via del Corso) became in the 6th – 7th century the site for a Monastery, which Pope Sergius I recognised as Diacona.
The Monastery was embellished with wall paintings that came to be the successively executed. In 1409 the mOnastery was shifted and the upper church was constructed for worship.



To a large extent the wall paintings got neglected or destroyed. From 1658 to 1662, Pietro Berrettini da Cortona construct the atrium and the marvelous façade of the church.
From the atrium a double entry to the crypt was made in order to enable pilgrims to have access to the spot venerated as the prison of St Paul. In 1904, while searching for evidence of the prison of St Paul, Canon Luigi Cavazzi lighted upon the important wall paintings that go back to VII/VIII cent.
A place to visit where the power of faith is still perceptible.
VISITS Tuesday- Sunday: 16-19 hrs (winter 15-18)
Saturday and Sunday : also 10-13
Monday Closed
www.cryptavialata.it



Each turist coming in Rome during the weekends has in program monuments and places that are famous around the world.
In 1665 Bernini had to temporarily leave the Roman scenario, because he was called to Paris by Louis XIV to project the façade of the Louvre. As a first project he suggested a solution identical to the Assunta complex; at his return the old artist conceived an unusual composition for the Palace in Ariccia, combining the “U” scheme of Roman Villas with a rectangular plan and corner towers, inspired by the French castles of Ile de France.
Agostino Chigi “The Magnificient” (1465-1520) was an outstanding figure of the family, among the greatest patrons of the Renaissance, who commissioned the family chapel in Santa Maria del Popolo and in Santa Maria della Pace to Raphael, the famous villa later called “Farnesina to Baldassare Peruzzi and the Villa delle Volte outside Siena.




































