“There is not a corner of it that is not full of our cults and our gods.”Rome, in a sense, has been sacred ground right from the start.
To many, Rome is the epicenter of Catholicism, the seat of the Vatican and home to a seemingly infinite number of churches.
Rome has sheltered polytheistic pagans and monotheistic Jews, adherents of Middle Eastern cults, and, in more recent times, a sizable multinational Muslim community.
All have left traces — altars, temples, shrines, mosques, inscriptions — some hauntingly beautiful, others erased to stubs.
But Rome and its environs conceal many holy places beyond the ken of the Bible.