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Step inside Rome as it existed between 1490 and 1795—a city where medieval streets overlaid ancient ruins, where Baroque fountains rose from Roman stadiums, and where the tombs of emperors exploded with fireworks to celebrate popes. Using advanced AI, we've brought to life hundreds of historical paintings and engravings by masters like Piranesi, Panini, and Canaletto. This isn't CGI imagination—every scene is reconstructed from actual 18th-century artwork, showing you Rome exactly as artists of the period documented it. 🎨 SOURCES & AUTHENTICITY: Every scene in this video is based on real historical artwork: Piranesi's architectural etchings (1740s-1770s) Panini's Grand Tour paintings (1730s-1750s) Canaletto's precise vedute (1740s-1750s) Herman Swanevelt's landscapes (1650s) Edward Lear's Romantic watercolors (1840s) Giuseppe Vasi's documentary engravings (1750s) Antonio Tempesta's city panoramas (1593) Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach's architectural studies We used AI video generation to add movement, atmosphere, and cinematic camera work to these static images—bringing you as close as possible to walking through Rome three centuries ago. 🌍 WHY THIS MATTERS: Rome between 1490 and 1795 wasn't just history—it was the blueprint for Western architecture, urban planning, and cultural tourism. The Grand Tour shaped how Europeans (and later Americans) understood art, architecture, and civilization itself. By seeing Rome through the eyes of period artists, we understand: How ancient ruins influenced Renaissance and Baroque architecture Why Rome became the essential destination for artists, architects, and scholars How a city can be continuously reinvented while preserving its past The birth of modern tourism and heritage preservation 💬 TELL US: Which city and which century should we visit next?