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Jérôme is going to taste the Dolce Vita for a weekend in Rome. The Italian capital has lost none of its splendor. Rome still fascinates, with its beauty, its culture, its gastronomy but also and above all with its History. Jérôme wanders on a scooter in the streets of Rome on the Piazza Navona, he meets Capucine, a French expatriate. Together, they stroll on the Piazza du Tertre, famous for its street artists and its three fountains. Once settled in his bed and breakfast, Jérôme continues his visit, and passes through the imposing gate of the gardens of the Villa Borghese. There he meets Alberta Campitelli, responsible for the green spaces of Rome. The Villa Borghese is also home to a building that is the pride of the French: the Villa Medici occupied for several centuries by the Académie de France. Jérôme now has an appointment with Sandro, a horse breeder. They take the horses out of their boxes to harness them. The walk begins on the Via Appia Antica, the most famous and best-preserved ancient road. Sandro tells Jérôme the history of this legendary road, strewn with Roman remains. Sandro advises Jérôme to take a legionnaire combat course at a historical reenactment association… Jérôme finds Capucine again but this time in a district less known to tourists and off the beaten track: the Coppedè district. It is not a district in the strict sense of the word but a corner of Rome with unusual and bizarre shapes, a fantastic mix of Art Nouveau with infiltrations of Greek, Gothic, Baroque and even medieval art. Capucine and Jérôme go to the Piazza Alessandria market, well known to the Romans (and less touristy than the Campo Di Fiori). After the market, Jérôme accompanies Capucine to her home. There, he meets Giuseppina, Capucine's Italian mother-in-law. She offers to teach Jerome how to cook a typical Roman dish: pasta alla Amatriciana. After this meal, Jerome walks through the streets of Rome. He enters a shop, located just a few blocks from the Vatican. The location is not random, it is a shop of ecclesiastical clothing, the Mancinelli company. The tailor Raniero Mancinelli takes care of making the Pope's clothes. Roberto offers Jerome a real dive into the History of Rome. For this, Jerome puts on caving equipment. Together, they will discover the catacombs of San Sentatore, in Albano Laziale, a town a few kilometers south of Rome. These catacombs, at the origin of the quarries on the Via Appia, became the burial place of Christians in the 2nd century. But more than just a burial place, the catacombs were also a place of life in their own right... The tradition of cinema is strong in Rome. Rome wanted to anchor it definitively in 1937, with the inauguration of the Cinecittà Studios. For years, these studios have marked the history of cinema, thanks to films such as Ben-Hur or La Dolce Vita. Federico Costantino, assistant scenographer to the greatest Italian scenographer Dante Ferretti, invites Jérôme to visit these studios. Before concluding his stay, Jérôme bows to tradition... He throws a coin in the Trevi Fountain, to be sure to return to Rome once again.