Forum
Dating back to the 1st century B.C., the Roman Forum would once have been the city’s principle public meeting space, where people would trade and barter, discuss politics, and also worship at the temple. The site of the Forum as you see it today, with ancient paving stones and some crumbling ruins, was only discovered in the 1930s. Nowadays, it is overlooked by the Church of St. Donat, the cathedral, the Archaeological Museum, and several open-air cafés.
Dating back to the 1st century B.C., the Roman Forum would once have been the city’s principle public meeting space, where people would trade and barter, discuss politics, and also worship at the temple. The site of the Forum as you see it today, with ancient paving stones and some crumbling ruins, was only discovered in the 1930s. Nowadays, it is overlooked by the Church of St. Donat, the cathedral, the Archaeological Museum, and several open-air cafés.
