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A shiva for Julius Caesar and Rome’s other Jewish surprises

From Judaean gladiators to perfect fried artichokes, I’ve had four days of marvellous history and art

April 24, 2025 14:41
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A vintage lithograph depicting the death of Julius Caesar (Image: Getty)
4 min read

When in Rome do as the Romans do. Walk. Yesterday we walked 18,344 steps. Each. We did an exhibition of Flowers. Art from the renaissance to AI in the Chiostro Del Bramante art gallery in the morning and a guided tour of the Forum and the Colosseum in the afternoon. Today we did the Jewish Quarter. You can do all of that in Rome if you can take the cramp from your astonished calves – because the archaic artefacts, excavations and BCE remains are right there in the street, visible through every railing, as you meander between roundabouts.

It is all sensational… and humbling. There is too much to take in in four days.

The flowers were curated by Franziska Stöhr with Roger Diederen to create havoc with your senses and to drown you in a floral cornucopia. The first room was floor-to-ceiling arches curtained in billowing voile, painted with massive flowers, leaves and tendrils in glorious pastel shades. The paintings flow on to the floor. It was impossible not to lie back and wait for Puck, if you take my meaning. You walked down corridors of hanging braids of papery autumn leaves. Video took you via illustrative wildflowers to beneath the soil, and three Israelis from the Israel Museum in Jerusalem created a film showing how they made bees work on wax casings of Roman busts, each one individually formed to a humming soundtrack assailing all your senses.

Each room had a vessel at the door with a particular perfume to be inhaled. It was heady stuff. There was a forest bed of tiny, delicate black metal cut-outs which morphed into vibrant colour as you walked past it and, best of all, at just the right time, a vast velvet pouffe on which to lie back as upside-down blooms opened and closed above your head. LSD was not required.