Your perfect getaway begins with luxury accomodations in the heart of the eternal city, Rome. Everyone finds something to love from the Colosseum, the Trevi Fountain, Circus Maximus, St. Peter's Basilica, Castel Sant'Angelo, Arch of Constantine, dinner cruises around the Tiber, the architecture, bridges, restaurants with cuisine for any pallete, theatres, museums, shopping, and a robust night life. Whether you want to relax overlooking Piazza Navona, refresh the spirit, mind and body at world renown spas, or mingle with bustling crowds you'll find it all at our luxury 5 Star Rome Hotels featuring some of the finest restaurants and shopping found anywhere in the world.
We have identified some of Rome's finest and most luxurious hotels with some of the world's best amenities, restaurants, and spa's in the heart of this great city. Spoil yourself at one of these fine 5 Star Rome Hotels.
From grand dwellings in uptown New York City to street art covered laneways in Melbourne, via historic crescents in Bath and tree-lined roads in Pretoria, these are the world's most beautiful streets.
The editors at Cruise Critic have picked the best ships in ocean, luxury and river cruising for 2019. Their choice for best new ship has a go-kart track and almost 20 restaurants.
Whether they're pretending to be an airplane captain or becoming aggressive and forcing an airplane to divert, badly behaved airplane travelers continue to hit headlines.
It's been in the headlines for all the wrong reasons this year, but that hasn't stopped this Asian destination emerging as the most visited city on the planet in 2019, according to Euromonitor.
Believe it or not, airlines would rather you go by train versus a plane for some trips. Find out why air-rail alliances can make business, environmental and travel sense.
Two vegan hotels in the UK-- Saorsa 1875 in Perthshire, Scotland, and Hilton London Bankside in London -- eschew all animal products. From their furnishings right down to staff uniforms, find out how they've done it.
In a city with a sleek, squeaky-clean downtown, the lifestyle editor Sara Harowitz finds authenticity in a neighborhood that has retained its blue collar roots. She shares her favorite spots.
In the mountains of Transylvania, residents hoped visitors would flock to spas and resorts to bathe and heal in the cold, clear waters. The dream has faded, but the taps still flow.
Among the postindustrial-chic buildings and stylish restaurants and shops: Victorian splendor, verdant hide-outs and the long-ago haunts of writers and musicians.
Themed eateries in the Russian capital cater to a taste for the past, recalling Black Sea vacations, Space Race euphoria and the days of service without a smile.
With just a few stops left on a yearlong trip, the 52 Places Traveler reveled in the sunny days in Perth and the Northern Rivers region, but there were ominous signs as well.
The African-American novelist journeys to Ghana, once a hub of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, as the nation invites descendants of enslaved Africans to call it their “home.” But can you go home again?
On a meditation retreat, the goal was to be mindful of each step, each bite, each breath, to gain insight without distraction. Think of it as a spa for the mind.
At the Brooklyn Museum, his pictures skim the surface of social problems. It can be a frustratingly reductive vision of world peace. “I think being naïve is what has helped me the most,” he says.