The Forum.
(The Colloseum is nearby, the agora is Greek, and the Vatican did not exist)
The Roman version of an agora was the forum.
The Agora
Rome (Vatican, St Peter's Basilica, Colosseum, The Pantheon, ruins of Forum Romanum, etc).
No. There is only one Colosseum and that is in Rome. Pompeii had an amphitheater, but not in it's forum. A forum is a marketplace and civic center. An amphitheater is a place for public entertainment.
The Colosseum, the Vatican, the ruins of the forum of ancient Rome, the Pantheon, the Sistine Chapel and, if you're into the macabre, the Catacombs
forum is Latin and means the marketplace, the central square, the place where public gathers.The Greek for forum is agora
A forum was the Roman market place or open central area. In Greece called agora.
In Rome a market place was a forum; in Greece it was an agora.
The Colosseum was originally built on the site of Nero's palace, the Domus Aurea. This was done by Emperor Vespasian in order to disassociate himself from Nero, who was hated. It is in the center of modern day Rome just east of the Forum.
The closest thing to a Roman Forum in Greek time would have been the Agora, which was the Greek meeting place and market.
The Colosseum is between the Palatine, Cealian and Esquiline hills, at the bottom of the imperial fora (plural of forum), and by the Arch of Constantine and the Circus Maximus in the city of Rome.
No, the Acropolis was uniquely Greek. The Roman Forum was comparable in many ways to the Greek Agora.