Travel in Antiquity | Part 6: When (Not) In Rome

It’s little surprise that when the summer heat hit, the ancient Romans were eager to trade the stench and squalor of the capital for the salty sea breeze of the coast. From the picture Juvenal paints, the Eternal City has been eternally unbearable during the summer swelter.

Myself, I would value a barren offshore island more than Rome’s urban heat; Squalor and isolation are minor evils compared to this endless nightmare of fire and collapsing houses, the cruel city’s myriad perils – and poets reciting their works in August!

Juvenal, Satires 3.5-10

August is just as oppressive today as it was then. And while modern Romans complain more about herds of tourists instead of the city’s incessant public poetry recitals, they share their ancestors’ eagerness to escape.

It was Rome’s first emperor, Augustus, who instituted the Ferragosto – a public holiday Italians still look forward to every August 15. The ancient Ferragosto didn’t constitute the en masse coastal escape it does today. Yet affluent Romans would still use the festive period to flee to their respective villas for the coast or the fresh air of the country.

We know a great deal about these villas, not least through the letters of Cicero and the Younger Pliny.

Those with sea views were good; those that stretched down to the shore even better.

Cicero had dozens, including one in Tusculum which was essentially a resort town for the rich and powerful, and another, surrounded by a fresh, flowing river where he could read and write — philosophy as opposed to work emails — in peace.

Thomas Worthington Whittredge, The Amphitheatre of Tusculum and Albano Mountains (1860)
Thomas Worthington Whittredge, The Amphitheatre of Tusculum and Albano Mountains (1860)

Cicero didn’t much like staying at his villa in Formiae though. His valuable beach time was constantly being interrupted by passing acquaintances – a Sebosus or Arrius, or whichever other political or business associate had retreated to the Latin coast.

The frequency of Cicero’s seaside interruptions suggests something that shouldn’t come as a surprise to any modern Roman, Tuscan, Italian, Greek, or anyone else living within the modern coastal confines of the ancient empire:

The Nymphaeum of Cicero's Villa at Formia, Italy
The Nymphaeum of Cicero’s Villa at Formia, Italy

At the height of Mediterranean summers, the best beaches have always been packed.

Through all the people we’ve encountered and the journeys we’ve been on throughout this series, one theme shines through clearly. That although ancient Greeks and Romans don’t seem to have had a word (or concept) that directly maps onto our idea of “pleasure travel,” many of them clearly enjoyed the experience of travel itself, for its own sake.

Aristocrats travelled for historical and religious research. Pliny travelled for science; plenty of people traveled for health reasons, or to see a spectacle or a chariot race, or to dedicate sacrifices to a god.

All the same, they clearly relished opportunities to visit famous historical sites and tourist attractions, and, as Aelius Aristides tells us, even spend a day on some local “adventure activities.”

We might find it strange that Greeks and Romans needed to make excuses to have an enjoyable vacation — but don’t we, in a way, do the same?

“This will be great for Instagram,” we tell ourselves. “That place has always been on my bucket list.”

Our culture, like that of the Romans, tends to be intensely practically minded; sometimes to a fault. And while our justifications have evolved over the centuries, the principle remains: we’re always coming up with excuses to get out of the city and see the world.

Because, intrinsically and innately, that’s what we’re naturally inclined to do.

Alexander Meddings
Alexander Meddings

Alexander Meddings is a professional writer and content consultant. After graduating in ancient history from the universities of Exeter and Oxford, he moved to Italy to pursue his passion at the source. He now lives in Rome, where he works as a writer and guide.

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