boats
Over the operation year (2007) they have benefited from our services:
• 25,000 passengers from the major tour operators.
•
30,000 customers booked through direct sales outlets in Rome (call center Battelli di Roma, embarkation, desk Margana Travel)
•
45,000 passengers between schools, associations and CRAL on Italiy.
•
5,000 students with the programme "City as School" in collaboration with the Municipality of Rome and Legambiente
•
5,000 people in direct cooperation with the municipal administration
•
4,000 elderly subscribers of the project promoted by the Province of Rome
•
95,000 passengers on the transport service line.
Rea Silvia
in service from / 1995
number of seats / 66
lenght / 23 mt
width / 4.50 mt
Motor structured on a single bridge (completely covered walkway and without external)
• Scope passengers: 66 (types of proceedings: armchairs),
Broken down depending on the type of product:
66 seats for cruises commented
From 45 to 66 seats for dinner (in tables 4 / 5 or 6 people)
•
Services: toilets, bar, plant for voice and music piped sound
She was the daughter of Numitore, king of Alba, and mother of Romolo and Remo. According to the legend the wicked Amulio usurped the throne to his brother Numitore and forced Rea Silvia to become priestess of Vesta so that she wouldn’t marry and wouldn’t give birth to any child. But Rea Silvia loved by Mars gave birth to Romolo and Remo. Amulio imprisoned Rea Silvia and forced her to leave her twins in a small basket along the waters of the Tiber to let them die. But the two twins were rescued by two shepherds and nursed by a wolf. When they became adults they set her mother free, came back to Alba, killed Amulio and re-established the throne of their grandfather Numitore.
Agrippina Maggiore
number of seats / 50
lenght / 24 mt
width / 4.80 mt
Motor structured on a single bridge (covered)
• Scope passengers: 50 (types of proceedings: armchairs and chairs)
Broken down depending on the type of product:
35 seats for cruises commented diurnal
50 seats up for dinner (tables 2 or 4 people)
• Services: toilets, bar, plant voice and music.
Cornelia
in service from / 1997
number of seats / 80
lenght / 16.50 mt
width / 4.50 mt
Motor structured on a single bridge (semi opened with side windows)
• Scope passengers: 66 (types of sessions: chairs oriented back / front)
• Services: planting voice
Cornelia was a roman matron, daughter of Scipione l’Africano wife of Tiberio Sempronio Gracco and mother of the tribunes Tiberio and Caio Gracco. She was a very learned woman and had a very strong nature. A story tells that although she became widow very young, she refused to marry the king of Egypt , Tolomeo Fiscone, to devote herself to the education of her children. It is told that when a matron showed her her jewels she answered: “These are my jewels” showing the matron her children. Later a statue in the Roman Forum was erected in her honour with the epigraph "Cornelia mother of the Gracchi".
Livia Drusilla
in service from / 1995
number of seats / 80
lenght / 16.50 mt
width / 4.50 mt
Livia Drusilla was Augusto’s wife and Tiberio’s mother. She was the daughter of Marco Livio Druso Claudiano and of Aufidia. In 38 b. C. she married Ottaviano, after divorcing from Tiberio Claudio Nerone. She brought to the future emperor not only a useful relationship of two of the most powerful families of the republican aristocracy (the Livi and the Claudi) but also a deep devotion to him. She represented for her beauty and chastity, the ideal figure of woman and of roman empress. She was suspected to be involved in a conspiracy to give power to her son Tiberio, in which some members of the imperial family died, but there is no confirmation of that. He was adopted in Augusto’s testament and became member of the “Gens Julia” , so that after she died her name became Giulia Augusta (58 b.C-29 a.C).
SERVICES: SOUND EQUIPMENT, ACCESS FOR DISABLED PEOPLE
Calpurnia
in service from / 2003
number of seats / 180
lenght / 21.36 mt
width / 5.22 mt
Motor structured on two bridges
• Passenger Flow: 170/180 (types of proceedings: benches)
75 seats covered in the hall (4 for 16 central tables and benches people perimeter boat without tables
50 upper deck seats discovered (with tables)
45 posts discovered bow / stern perimeter lower deck
• Services: toilet (no access for disabled), point refreshment bar with voice and music facility, access for disabled
Cecilia Metella
in service from / 1995
number of seats / 15
lenght / 8 mt
width / 2.50 mt
The Mausoleum located in the upper part of Via Appia Antica, after the “Circo di Massenzio” is the best preserved tomb of the Archeological Park of Appia Antica. It is famous for its cylindrical shape. It probably dates back to the year 50 b.C. when Marco Licinio Grasso, a very rich and influential man, made it build to the memory of his wife Cecilia Metella. In the tombstone you can still clearly read Cecilia Metella’s origins. She was the daughter of Quinto Metello Cretico, consul in the year 69 b.C. During the Byzantine age it had been used to control trade along via Appia and in the Middle Age the earls of Tuscolo built a for fortress to completly overlook the passage on the street.