Bed and Breakfast in Rome, Italy
#1
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Bed and Breakfast in Rome (the traditional one and an another one
unrecognized):
besides the historic centre, discover the great natural and archaeological
sites at south of the capital.
a sympathetic welcome in a popular district,
a quiet street,
direct public transport for :
Termini central station,
Vittorio-Emmanuele square (piazza Vittorio),
Saint-John's of the Lateran, Holy Cross in Jerusalem,
Saint-Lorenzo outside the wall and its area,
Villa Borghese,
Vatican
And you are perfectly situated to go to discover the Albans hills, (Albano
and Nemi lakes, Frascati and its villas, Aariccia and sampling of the
Porchetta, famous all over Italy, Grottaferrata and its fortified abbey,
Rocca di Papa, .), the Appian Way, the Caffarella park (natural oasis in the
heart of the city),the Latin tombs park, Aqueducts park, the Alexander
Severus' Aqueduct, the Saint Helen mausoleum, ...
. and don't forgive the sea, so near of Rome.
Please contact me to get a more complete documentation.
unrecognized):
besides the historic centre, discover the great natural and archaeological
sites at south of the capital.
a sympathetic welcome in a popular district,
a quiet street,
direct public transport for :
Termini central station,
Vittorio-Emmanuele square (piazza Vittorio),
Saint-John's of the Lateran, Holy Cross in Jerusalem,
Saint-Lorenzo outside the wall and its area,
Villa Borghese,
Vatican
And you are perfectly situated to go to discover the Albans hills, (Albano
and Nemi lakes, Frascati and its villas, Aariccia and sampling of the
Porchetta, famous all over Italy, Grottaferrata and its fortified abbey,
Rocca di Papa, .), the Appian Way, the Caffarella park (natural oasis in the
heart of the city),the Latin tombs park, Aqueducts park, the Alexander
Severus' Aqueduct, the Saint Helen mausoleum, ...
. and don't forgive the sea, so near of Rome.
Please contact me to get a more complete documentation.
#2
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On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Bed and Breakfast in Rome (the traditional one and an another one
>unrecognized):
Tell us about the other one ...
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Bed and Breakfast in Rome (the traditional one and an another one
>unrecognized):
Tell us about the other one ...
#3
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I speak about a lot of sites in my message. I love them and i rarely see
foreigners there. This is my other Rome : but maybe you know that city
better than me. As for me i've been living here for over 6 years and i know
Rome since 1988. The parks at the south of Rome are a surprising countryside
in the middle of the town. Tombs, unknown well-preserved antic temples, one
of the last traditionnal farm of the roman countryside, the spring of Egeria
(beloved nymph of the second king of Rome), you can go to the catacombs
walking between sheeps, horses, hens, fields, eating mulberries and others
(ifever able to recognize them).
<[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:[email protected]...
> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> >Bed and Breakfast in Rome (the traditional one and an another one
> >unrecognized):
> Tell us about the other one ...
foreigners there. This is my other Rome : but maybe you know that city
better than me. As for me i've been living here for over 6 years and i know
Rome since 1988. The parks at the south of Rome are a surprising countryside
in the middle of the town. Tombs, unknown well-preserved antic temples, one
of the last traditionnal farm of the roman countryside, the spring of Egeria
(beloved nymph of the second king of Rome), you can go to the catacombs
walking between sheeps, horses, hens, fields, eating mulberries and others
(ifever able to recognize them).
<[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:[email protected]...
> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> >Bed and Breakfast in Rome (the traditional one and an another one
> >unrecognized):
> Tell us about the other one ...
#4
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On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
never rent from a spammer
never rent from a spammer
#5
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On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:33:52 +0200, "Pierre B."
<[email protected]> wrote:
><[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
>news:[email protected].. .
>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >Bed and Breakfast in Rome (the traditional one and an another one
>> >unrecognized):
>> Tell us about the other one ...
>I speak about a lot of sites in my message.
Duh! I was thinking you offered two sorts of B&B ;-)
> I love them and i rarely see
>foreigners there. This is my other Rome : but maybe you know that city
>better than me. As for me i've been living here for over 6 years and i know
>Rome since 1988.
I worked on and off in Rome since 1968.
> The parks at the south of Rome are a surprising countryside
>in the middle of the town.
Not forgetting GRA, the biggest car park in southern Europe :-)
>Tombs, unknown well-preserved antic temples, one
>of the last traditionnal farm of the roman countryside,
Where's that?
> the spring of Egeria
>(beloved nymph of the second king of Rome), you can go to the catacombs
>walking between sheeps, horses, hens, fields, eating mulberries and others
>(ifever able to recognize them).
and Villa Adriana surrounded by farms
<[email protected]> wrote:
><[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
>news:[email protected].. .
>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >Bed and Breakfast in Rome (the traditional one and an another one
>> >unrecognized):
>> Tell us about the other one ...
>I speak about a lot of sites in my message.
Duh! I was thinking you offered two sorts of B&B ;-)
> I love them and i rarely see
>foreigners there. This is my other Rome : but maybe you know that city
>better than me. As for me i've been living here for over 6 years and i know
>Rome since 1988.
I worked on and off in Rome since 1968.
> The parks at the south of Rome are a surprising countryside
>in the middle of the town.
Not forgetting GRA, the biggest car park in southern Europe :-)
>Tombs, unknown well-preserved antic temples, one
>of the last traditionnal farm of the roman countryside,
Where's that?
> the spring of Egeria
>(beloved nymph of the second king of Rome), you can go to the catacombs
>walking between sheeps, horses, hens, fields, eating mulberries and others
>(ifever able to recognize them).
and Villa Adriana surrounded by farms
#6
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With no car, I do not have to park in the GRA. You know Rome since 1968 and
you don't know the Caffarella farm ? As for villa Adriana I don't know if it
is so easy to visit the farms around for a traveler. But - once again - the
Cafarella farm is easy to find.
<[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:[email protected]...
> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:33:52 +0200, "Pierre B."
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> ><[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
> >news:[email protected].. .
> >> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
> >> <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >> >Bed and Breakfast in Rome (the traditional one and an another one
> >> >unrecognized):
> >>
> >> Tell us about the other one ...
> >I speak about a lot of sites in my message.
> Duh! I was thinking you offered two sorts of B&B ;-)
> > I love them and i rarely see
> >foreigners there. This is my other Rome : but maybe you know that city
> >better than me. As for me i've been living here for over 6 years and i
know
> >Rome since 1988.
> I worked on and off in Rome since 1968.
> > The parks at the south of Rome are a surprising countryside
> >in the middle of the town.
> Not forgetting GRA, the biggest car park in southern Europe :-)
> >Tombs, unknown well-preserved antic temples, one
> >of the last traditionnal farm of the roman countryside,
> Where's that?
> > the spring of Egeria
> >(beloved nymph of the second king of Rome), you can go to the catacombs
> >walking between sheeps, horses, hens, fields, eating mulberries and
others
> >(ifever able to recognize them).
> and Villa Adriana surrounded by farms
you don't know the Caffarella farm ? As for villa Adriana I don't know if it
is so easy to visit the farms around for a traveler. But - once again - the
Cafarella farm is easy to find.
<[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:[email protected]...
> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:33:52 +0200, "Pierre B."
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> ><[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
> >news:[email protected].. .
> >> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
> >> <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >> >Bed and Breakfast in Rome (the traditional one and an another one
> >> >unrecognized):
> >>
> >> Tell us about the other one ...
> >I speak about a lot of sites in my message.
> Duh! I was thinking you offered two sorts of B&B ;-)
> > I love them and i rarely see
> >foreigners there. This is my other Rome : but maybe you know that city
> >better than me. As for me i've been living here for over 6 years and i
know
> >Rome since 1988.
> I worked on and off in Rome since 1968.
> > The parks at the south of Rome are a surprising countryside
> >in the middle of the town.
> Not forgetting GRA, the biggest car park in southern Europe :-)
> >Tombs, unknown well-preserved antic temples, one
> >of the last traditionnal farm of the roman countryside,
> Where's that?
> > the spring of Egeria
> >(beloved nymph of the second king of Rome), you can go to the catacombs
> >walking between sheeps, horses, hens, fields, eating mulberries and
others
> >(ifever able to recognize them).
> and Villa Adriana surrounded by farms
#7
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Who said I'm a spammer ?
"127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:[email protected]...
> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
> never rent from a spammer
"127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:[email protected]...
> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
> never rent from a spammer
#8
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On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 15:12:57 +0200, "Pierre B."
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Who said I'm a spammer ?
>"127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
>news:[email protected].. .
>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>> never rent from a spammer
Ignore him it's his standard message.
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Who said I'm a spammer ?
>"127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
>news:[email protected].. .
>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>> never rent from a spammer
Ignore him it's his standard message.
#9
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On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 15:28:07 +0200, nitram wrote:
> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 15:12:57 +0200, "Pierre B."
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Who said I'm a spammer ?
>>"127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
>>news:[email protected]. ..
>>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>>> never rent from a spammer
>
> Ignore him it's his standard message.
Doesn't mean the OP is not a spammer. And arguably it is indeed
ill-advised to do business with people who indulge in stealing bandwith.
Tells you sometihng about their ethics, what sort of person they are.
How will they deal with you when you show up?
> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 15:12:57 +0200, "Pierre B."
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Who said I'm a spammer ?
>>"127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
>>news:[email protected]. ..
>>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>>> never rent from a spammer
>
> Ignore him it's his standard message.
Doesn't mean the OP is not a spammer. And arguably it is indeed
ill-advised to do business with people who indulge in stealing bandwith.
Tells you sometihng about their ethics, what sort of person they are.
How will they deal with you when you show up?
#10
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On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 15:12:57 +0200, Pierre B. wrote:
> Who said I'm a spammer ?
>
> "127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
> news:[email protected]...
>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>> never rent from a spammer
127 said you were a spammer, so you must be one. ;-)
But he/she/it always does that. I think it's an automatic response.
--
Tim C.
> Who said I'm a spammer ?
>
> "127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
> news:[email protected]...
>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>> never rent from a spammer
127 said you were a spammer, so you must be one. ;-)
But he/she/it always does that. I think it's an automatic response.
--
Tim C.
#11
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"devil" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected].. .
> Doesn't mean the OP is not a spammer. And arguably it is indeed
> ill-advised to do business with people who indulge in stealing bandwith.
> Tells you sometihng about their ethics, what sort of person they are.
> How will they deal with you when you show up?
Back in 2000 I used a B & B in Rome which I learned about from spam on this
group. The place was OK. (Run by a young couple, architects called Ettore
and Anna, can't remember their surname.)
Alan Harrison
news:[email protected].. .
> Doesn't mean the OP is not a spammer. And arguably it is indeed
> ill-advised to do business with people who indulge in stealing bandwith.
> Tells you sometihng about their ethics, what sort of person they are.
> How will they deal with you when you show up?
Back in 2000 I used a B & B in Rome which I learned about from spam on this
group. The place was OK. (Run by a young couple, architects called Ettore
and Anna, can't remember their surname.)
Alan Harrison
#12
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 5
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Originally Posted by Tim Challenger
On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 15:12:57 +0200, Pierre B. wrote:
> Who said I'm a spammer ?
>
> "127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
> news:[email protected]...
>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>> never rent from a spammer
127 said you were a spammer, so you must be one. ;-)
But he/she/it always does that. I think it's an automatic response.
--
Tim C.
> Who said I'm a spammer ?
>
> "127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
> news:[email protected]...
>> On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>> never rent from a spammer
127 said you were a spammer, so you must be one. ;-)
But he/she/it always does that. I think it's an automatic response.
--
Tim C.
I think 127 ([email protected]) is a sad individual with nothing better to do than wind people up. He obviously has no life out there. Pathetic really!
Maybe we should add his email adddress to some of the conventioanl spams we get and see how he likes it....now there a thought?
![La Bergerie is offline](https://britishexpats.com/forum/images/statusicon/user_offline.gif)
#13
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La Bergerie wrote:
>>On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 15:12:57 +0200, Pierre B. wrote:
>>>Who said I'm a spammer ?
>>>"127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
>>>news:[email protected] ...
>>>>On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>>>>never rent from a spammer
>>127 said you were a spammer, so you must be one. ;-)
>>But he/she/it always does that. I think it's an automatic response.
>>--
>>Tim C.
>
>
> I think 127 ([email protected]) is a sad individual with nothing better to
> do than wind people up. He obviously has no life out there.
> Pathetic really!
>
> Maybe we should add his email adddress to some of the conventioanl spams
> we get and see how he likes it....now there a thought?
>
Yes,let's introduce him to the fool who spams all sorts of newsgroups
about nonsmoking restaurants. Maybe will be the romance of a lifetime...
billfrogg
>>On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 15:12:57 +0200, Pierre B. wrote:
>>>Who said I'm a spammer ?
>>>"127.0.0.1" <[email protected]> ha scritto nel messaggio
>>>news:[email protected] ...
>>>>On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 13:01:13 +0200, "Pierre B."
>>>>never rent from a spammer
>>127 said you were a spammer, so you must be one. ;-)
>>But he/she/it always does that. I think it's an automatic response.
>>--
>>Tim C.
>
>
> I think 127 ([email protected]) is a sad individual with nothing better to
> do than wind people up. He obviously has no life out there.
> Pathetic really!
>
> Maybe we should add his email adddress to some of the conventioanl spams
> we get and see how he likes it....now there a thought?
>
Yes,let's introduce him to the fool who spams all sorts of newsgroups
about nonsmoking restaurants. Maybe will be the romance of a lifetime...
billfrogg
#14
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billfrogg wrote:
>
> Yes,let's introduce him to the fool who spams all sorts of newsgroups
> about nonsmoking restaurants. Maybe will be the romance of a lifetime...
>
> billfrogg
I'm always happy to hear of a non-smoking restaurant. What's wrong with
someone pointing one out?
>
> Yes,let's introduce him to the fool who spams all sorts of newsgroups
> about nonsmoking restaurants. Maybe will be the romance of a lifetime...
>
> billfrogg
I'm always happy to hear of a non-smoking restaurant. What's wrong with
someone pointing one out?
#15
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On Mon, 16 Aug 2004 15:08:13 +0200, Ellie C <[email protected]>
wrote:
>billfrogg wrote:
>>
>> Yes,let's introduce him to the fool who spams all sorts of newsgroups
>> about nonsmoking restaurants. Maybe will be the romance of a lifetime...
>>
>> billfrogg
>I'm always happy to hear of a non-smoking restaurant. What's wrong with
>someone pointing one out?
Absolutely nothing.
I'm still waiting for a list of non smoking North Sea ferries.
wrote:
>billfrogg wrote:
>>
>> Yes,let's introduce him to the fool who spams all sorts of newsgroups
>> about nonsmoking restaurants. Maybe will be the romance of a lifetime...
>>
>> billfrogg
>I'm always happy to hear of a non-smoking restaurant. What's wrong with
>someone pointing one out?
Absolutely nothing.
I'm still waiting for a list of non smoking North Sea ferries.