Enjoy a small group early morning tour of the Vatican Museums with an expert guide and be amongst the first to enjoy the Sistine Chapel and Raphael Rooms.
Explore the vast Vatican Palaces: once home to the Popes, now a museum housing some of the most precious antiquities in the world. Works include the Apollo Belvedere and the Laocoon which inspired Michelangelo. See Nero’s vast bathtub and statues of ancient emperors, empresses, gods, and heroes.
Walk through the Gallery of Tapestries and the Gallery of Maps: stunning and incredibly detailed frescoed maps of Italy dating to the 17th century and edged with gold leaf.
Visit the Raphael Rooms, the private apartments of the Warrior Pope Julius II. It was he who simultaneously commissioned Raphael to paint these rooms and Michelangelo to paint the Sistine Chapel. This created their famous rivalry and inspired the creation of some of the greatest art of all time. See the famous School of Athens and the Disputa and learn about the life of the popular Raphael.
Finally, visit the Sistine Chapel. Be among the first visitors of the day to step inside one of the great wonders of the world and stand in awe and wonder beneath Michelangelo’s magnificent frescoes.
Your guide will explain the stories on the Ceiling, painted by Michelangelo when he was just 33. Painting the ceiling was backbreaking work that took him four years. You’ll see for yourself the incredible painting of God creating Adam – truly breathtaking. Then, admire the Last Judgement, filled with literally hundreds of muscular figures – saints and sinners, with the mighty figure of Christ towering above all, completed by Michelangelo in his sixties. In all, he spent a decade of his life painting in the Sistine Chapel!
After plenty of time to soak it all in, your guide will show you to the exquisite collection of paintings in the Pinacoteca: a collection that includes masterpieces by Leonardo, Raphael, and Caravaggio.
A Wednesday morning is the best day to visit the Vatican Museums because the Pope holds his weekly Audience on Wednesdays. This means access to the Basilica from the Museums is usually blocked off on Wednesdays and so there are far fewer visitors to the Museums.
For those who want to wait, you may wish to have lunch in the Vatican Museums restaurant after your guided tour and visit the Basilica in the afternoon once the Pope’s audience has concluded.