Ostia Antica (Part 1 )

in photography •  6 years ago  (edited)

Hello Steemians !

I have posted the odd picture here and there of my travels, but I thought I would put a group
of them together, and post as a travel blog, with some tips, and pointers.

Only 30 min from Rome is the ancient port town of Ostia Antica. Similar to Pompeii but
less commercial, no crowds and only 30 min from Rome.
Take the Metro in Rome to the Piramide station, when you exit the train go left
and up the stairs and take the Lido train, and get off at Ostia Antica.
The site is open year round from 8:30 am till 4:30, but times
may vary due to season, and is closed on Monday.
Entry is only 8 Euro, and the audio is extra.It is best to purchase the audio tour, the site
is very large and the audio gives a lot of information.
It is easy to spend a half day here, or even an entire day, however you will be in the sun
so sunscreen and a hat are necessary.
Ostia Theatre (1).JPG
A view of the theatre, still used today for the occasional event.

Ostia Baths.JPG

The baths of Neptune, with stunning floor mosaics, underneath would be
the slaves, feeding the fires to keep the water hot.
At the bottom centre is Triton the son of Poseidon, half man, half mermaid.

Ostia  Sarcophagus.JPG

A sarcophagus, a very common site in Ostia, the city of the dead (cemetery)was next to the city of the living.
The Romans went through different periods, sometimes cremation was popular, other
times burials, and ofcourse wealth and status played a role.
All human reamains have been removed and relocated.

IMG_0501.JPG
Originally built by Agrippa, this renovated version we see today with the
red brick was built by Commodus (176-192 AD). Seating for 4,000 people.
The red brick was a fired clay brick, a vast improvement over the older sun dried
versions. The new type greatly increased production.

IMG_0524.JPG

The public latrine was a really interesting sight. The net pattern of brickwork,
which was popular all over the empire is clearly evident here.
It is called opus reticulatum, which is Latin for net like.
The seats themselves are a marble, and the trough running through the room
would have water flowing through it. Often a stick with a sponge at the end was
used to put in the trough to clean it.
Can you imagine sitting there doing your business while chatting about the
days events with a neighbour.

IMG_0518.JPG

A peek inside an Ostian home. Nice marble walls, mosaic floors, statues.
This is called the house of Cupid and Psyche.

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You have a minor misspelling in the following sentence:

sarcophagus, a very common site in Ostia, the city of the dead (cemetary)was next to the city of the living.
It should be cemetery instead of cemetary.

Very nice! Thank you for reminding me that I need to travel.

haha, thanks, everyone needs to travel more.

Some posts are interesting, I follow this fred777bear guy, all he does is take stock photos from the net, uses the exact same comment and gets 20 or so upvotes and about 50 cents each post, and posts 20 pics a day..lol
I guess its a matter of finding a niche

That would be enough for me to unfollow. On ones like that, I see how long they have been on Steemit. And do you realize, you can look in his wallet to see if he pays for advertising?

Oh, I didn't know that, about advertising.... well at least he has upvoted me a few times...not like others who I upvoted 100x and never got one in return...lol

People should treat their followers well but I can see how it gets difficult when there are many. Did you notice it's becoming more favourable to convert Steem dollars again?

I don't have enough dollars to even think about such things...lol
Planning a trip to London in Sept, going to go to Edinburgh as well.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

I meant to power up. lol Sounds like a good trip.

Cool tour. I've never been to Europe but the history and architecture are very compelling.

Thanks, Italy is a must see.
Some really good courses online, Coursera is free and
had an excellent Roman art and architecture course.
I took it before I went, it really helps you to
understand what you are seeing.