Ottawa Citizen

A TRIP TO TIVOLI NEVER GETS OLD

It’s still Rome’s greatest side-trip escape, 2,000 years later, Rick Steves writes.

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When travel dreams take people to Europe, Italy is often their first stop. There’s something seductivel­y charming about this country, its people and la dolce vita. I always feel at home in

Italy, whether struggling onto a crowded bus in Rome, navigating the fun chaos of Naples, sipping a cocktail in a Venetian bar, or sitting on the banister of Florence’s Ponte Vecchio for a midnight street-music concert.

But I also seek escapes from Italy’s urban intensity. When

I’m visiting Rome, I like to travel about 30 kilometres east to the hill town of Tivoli, a popular retreat since ancient times. Today it’s famous for two very different villas: Hadrian’s Villa, a Roman emperor’s countrysid­e getaway, and Villa d’Este, the lush and watery 16th-century residence of a Catholic cardinal.

Hadrian (ruled AD 117-138) had a perfectly good villa in Rome, but he preferred to live outside the capital, and toward the end of his reign, he lived full-time at Tivoli. Just as Louis XIV governed France from Versailles rather than Paris, Hadrian ruled Rome from this villa complex of more than 300 evocative acres.

An architect, lover of Greek culture and great traveller, Hadrian envisioned the site as a microcosm of the lands he ruled, which at that point stretched from Britain to the Euphrates River in Western Asia. In the spirit of Legoland and Las Vegas, he recreated famous structures from around the known world, producing a kind of diorama of his empire.

By the time Hadrian was finished, he had erected more than 30 buildings and created extensive gardens. With libraries, temples, baths, theatres and palaces for himself, his friends and staff, the estate was completely self-contained.

Although most buildings in the complex have long since vanished, you can feel Hadrian’s hand in some remaining structures.

The emperor surrounded a rectangula­r water basin — meant to represent the Nile — with columns and statues, including copies of the caryatids he had admired at the Acropolis. At one end, he built a temple in memory of his close friend (and perhaps lover) Antinous, who had tragically drowned in the Nile.

Regrettabl­y, with the fall of the empire, this “Versailles of Ancient Rome” was first plundered by barbarians and then by Renaissanc­e big shots, who all wanted some relic of the classical world in their courtyards. They even burned the marble to make lime for cement. The scavenged art wound up in museums throughout Europe. (Some statures ended up across town, at the Villa d’Este.)

Much later, in 1550, another patron of the arts, Cardinal Ippolito d’Este, further transforme­d the Tivoli landscape. Even though he was a man of the cloth, Ippolito, cultured and wealthy, lived like a secular prince.

When he lost a closely contested election to be the next pope in 1549, he consoled himself by building his sumptuous villa in Tivoli. He cleared a Benedictin­e convent from the site and erected a luxurious Renaissanc­e palace, with elaboratel­y frescoed walls and ceilings.

But the main attraction at the Villa d’Este is the spectacula­r garden (which wasn’t fully installed until after Ippolito’s death). A hallmark of Italian design, it clings to a steep hill cascading with pools, streams, waterfalls and thundering fountains. Towering cypress, boxwood hedges, Roman statuary and pleasant paths direct the eye toward stately vistas all around.

Creating such an elaborate water park required the collaborat­ion of a garden architect (to lay out the garden), a hydraulic engineer (to get water to the site) and a plumber (who made sure the fountains worked). At Tivoli, the hillside site was massively excavated and re-engineered so the water features could be gravity-fed.

Pirro Ligorio, Tivoli’s architect, was convenient­ly excavating Hadrian’s Villa at the same time. That site provided much in inspiratio­n — and raw material — for the fountains of Villa d’Este. Ligorio basically used Hadrian’s Villa as a quarry to provide statuary and decorative stonework for his vision.

After Ippolito’s death, the estate was passed down in the Este family, but by the 19th century the house was in disrepair and the fountains plugged up. Now in the hands of the Italian state, it’s been completely restored, with all of its fabulous water features back in operation.

While Hadrian’s Villa is about haunting ruins and a storied history, Villa d’Este is simply beautiful and relaxing (and is especially appealing when it’s sweltering in Rome). The two sights complement each other well and combine to make a satisfying day trip from Rome. An easy subway/bus combinatio­n gets you from the city to Tivoli, where a public bus connects the two villas.

When I’m in Italy, I like to imagine what it was like centuries ago as I savour a cappuccino. At Tivoli, I can ramble through the rabble and rubble, mentally resurrecti­ng those ancient stones. Escaping the hubbub in Rome, I get chummy with the winds of the past, and connect with the pleasures of the moment.

Rick Steves (ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

 ?? SUZANNE KOTZ ?? At his villa in Tivoli, Emperor Hadrian re-created architectu­ral styles and statuary from across his vast empire.
SUZANNE KOTZ At his villa in Tivoli, Emperor Hadrian re-created architectu­ral styles and statuary from across his vast empire.
 ?? RICK STEVES ?? A model of Hadrian’s Villa helps visitors appreciate the vastness of the complex, much of which is now rubble.
RICK STEVES A model of Hadrian’s Villa helps visitors appreciate the vastness of the complex, much of which is now rubble.

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