Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore
Santa Maria Maggiore ranks as Rome's most spectacular papal basilica, housing extraordinary 5th-century mosaics that survived when most early Christian art didn't.
About Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore
Santa Maria Maggiore ranks as Rome's most spectacular papal basilica, housing extraordinary 5th-century mosaics that survived when most early Christian art didn't. You'll find yourself staring up at intricate Old Testament scenes across the nave walls while walking beneath a coffered ceiling literally gilded with the first gold brought back from the New World. The Borghese Chapel alone justifies the visit: it's a Baroque masterpiece that puts most standalone churches to shame, dripping with marble, frescoes, and Bernini sculptures.
The moment you step inside, the sheer scale hits you. The nave stretches 86 meters, lined with those ancient mosaics depicting Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Moses in remarkably preserved detail. Most visitors crane their necks at the ceiling for minutes, trying to process the intricate geometric patterns in American gold. The Sistine Chapel (not that one) contains Bernini's tomb, while the Borghese Chapel feels like stepping into a jewel box of colored marble and gilt bronze.
Most guides rush you through, but spend time with those 5th-century mosaics, they're older than anything you'll see in the Vatican. Skip the crypt unless you're fascinated by papal tombs. The €3 loggia access is absolutely worth it for close-up views of the 13th-century facade mosaics that you can barely make out from street level. Come early morning when tour groups haven't arrived and light streams through the windows perfectly.
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