『Rome Unveiled』のカバーアート

Rome Unveiled

Rome Unveiled

著者: City Walk Guides
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Rome is more than ruins; it is a living masterpiece. Join Sarah and local guide Giovanni as they explore the Eternal City. From the Forum's swampy origins to Renaissance secrets, and from coffee etiquette to the history on your plate, we uncover it all. This show is the audio companion to the Rome Unveiled App. We help you understand what you see, taste, and touch. Whether you are a history buff, architecture geek, or a foodie hunting for the perfect artichoke, this is your key to the city. Don't just visit Rome; unveil it.City Walk Guides
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  • The Perfect Vase: Myth, Tyranny, and the Birth of the Roman Republic
    2025/12/18

    The Rome Unveiled App is now available on iOS & Android!

    Search for 'Rome Audio Tour Guide Offline' in the app store or play store.

    Stand on the Capitoline Hill with Sarah and Giovanni as they shatter the "perfect vase" of Roman legend and reveal the broken shards of archaeological truth behind the fall of the kings.

    One crime. One suicide. One bloody dagger raised in the Forum. And suddenly, no more kings—forever.

    In this episode, we dive deep into the dramatic story that every Roman knew by heart: the arrogance of Tarquinius Superbus, the rape of Lucretia, Brutus's oath of liberty, and the furious uprising that birthed the Republic in "509 BC."

    But was it really one explosive night of revolution... or a slow, messy evolution over decades? You'll discover:

    • The timeless tyrant playbook: forced labor, murdered rivals, and massive temples built on resentment
    • How the Romans ingeniously dismantled kingly power—splitting it between two Consuls, adding vetoes, term limits, and even creating a powerless "King of Sacred Rites"
    • Why archaeology shows no dramatic destruction layer, but gradual change
    • The power of myth: how a tragic tale of virtue and vengeance became the founding story that inspired Romans for centuries—and even the American Founding Fathers
    • Lucretia's sacrifice, Brutus's brutal idealism, and why hating "king" became the ultimate Roman value

    It's history, propaganda, moral lesson, and blockbuster drama—all in one unforgettable story.

    The companion app tour for this episode takes you through the Roman Forum: the spot where Lucretia's body was displayed, the ancient Senate house, the Temple of Jupiter overlooking it all, and the sacred pomerium boundary where the deadly axe was symbolically removed from power.

    With GPS-triggered audio, offline maps, and hundreds of photos, the Rome Unveiled app makes these ancient power struggles come alive right under your feet—no data needed.

    Next time: the wild early Republic—internal class wars, external invasions, and how a city of farmers built the army that conquered the world.

    See you in the Forum.

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    35 分
  • Shadows of the Crown: The Seven Kings and the Birth of the Republic
    2025/12/05

    The Rome Unveiled App is coming soon to iOS & Android.

    Want early access when we launch? Just drop your email at romeunveiled.com

    Imagine standing on the Capitoline Hill at sunset while Sarah and Giovanni tell you the wild, bloody, and sometimes unbelievable story of Rome’s seven kings… and the one night the city finally said “enough.”

    244 years. Seven very different men on the throne. One crime so outrageous it ended the monarchy forever.

    In this episode we follow Rome’s journey from a cluster of sheep tracks and mud huts to a real city with sewers, racetracks, massive walls, and a temple so huge it dominated the skyline for a thousand years. Along the way you’ll meet:

    • Romulus the warrior-founder and Numa, the peace-loving king who talked to a water nymph
    • The ambitious Etruscan millionaire and his eagle-reading wife who basically staged a coup
    • The Cloaca Maxima, Circus Maximus, and the Temple of Jupiter – the megaprojects you can still see today
    • The slave boy whose head caught fire (harmlessly) and who grew up to invent Roman citizenship and social classes
    • The daughter who drove her chariot over her own father’s body
    • Lucretia’s tragic suicide, Brutus raising the bloody dagger, and the furious crowd that locked the last king out forever

    It’s part myth, part soap opera, and built on solid history. By the end you’ll understand why Romans hated the word “king” so much that it eventually cost Julius Caesar his life.

    When the app launches, this episode comes with its own walking route: Capitoline Hill, the best-preserved pieces of the ancient Servian Wall, and the narrow street still called “Street of Crime” because of what happened there 2,500 years ago.

    Next time we dive into the chaotic early Republic – when Rome almost didn’t survive, but somehow turned farmers into the most feared army the world had ever seen.

    See you on the hill.

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    34 分
  • Echoes of the Swamp: The Rome Before the Marble
    2025/11/03

    The Rome Unveiled App is coming soon to iOS & Android.

    Be the first to know when we launch:https://romeunveiled.comSign up for updates and get exclusive access to our launch specials.

    Welcome to the premiere of Rome Unveiled! In future episodes, we will tackle Roman cuisine and Baroque architecture, but today, we start where it all began: the mud.

    Before the marble, there was a swamp.

    What if the heart of ancient Rome was once a forgotten marshland? Join Sarah and local guide Giovanni as they step back 2,800 years, leaving the iconic Roman Forum behind to uncover the Rome that existed before emperors, before the Republic, and even before the stones were laid.

    Imagine the air thick with damp earth and woodsmoke, the bleating of sheep, and the rhythmic thud of wooden hammers. This is the Rome of struggling villages on defensible hilltops, using a marshy valley as their cemetery and a strategic river crossing as their gateway to opportunity.

    In this episode, we uncover:

    • The Swampy Origins: The surprising reasons why early settlers chose an "awful place" for their homes.
    • Life & Death: The "hut urns" and the intimate glimpse they offer into the lives of Rome's earliest inhabitants.
    • Myth vs. Memory: How the legend of Romulus and Remus and the Rape of the Sabine Women are encoded memories of true origins.
    • The First Transformation: How a simple salt road turned a graveyard into the Roman Forum.
    • The Etruscan Connection: The profound influence that shaped Rome's politics, architecture, and gods.

    Prepare to see the Eternal City through entirely new eyes. Rome wasn't built by conquest alone, but by a project of collective will.

    Planning a trip to Rome?Visit romeunveiled.com to preview our tours, maps, and curated guides before the app drops.

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    30 分
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