Formia 2026: Where Cicero Was Murdered on the Via Appia, Where the Best Mozzarella in Southern Lazio Is Made, and Where Rome Goes to the Sea

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026.

Formia (the Tyrrhenian coast town of approximately 37,000 inhabitants in the province of Latina, 140km south of Rome on the Via Appia between Gaeta and the Campania border) is the town where Marcus Tullius Cicero was murdered on December 7, 43 BC — intercepted by the soldiers of Mark Antony on the Via Appia south of the town while attempting to flee Italy after the formation of the Second Triumvirate. His head and hands were cut off and displayed on the Rostrum in the Roman Forum (the public speaking platform from which Cicero had delivered his greatest speeches) on the orders of Mark Antony, whose wife Fulvia is said in the ancient sources to have pierced Cicero's tongue with a hairpin in revenge for the speeches that had destroyed her first husband Clodius. The Tomb of Cicero (the ancient circular mausoleum on the Via Appia 3km north of Formia town center — not certainly Cicero's tomb but the best candidate on the available evidence, a 1st-century BC tower tomb of the correct dimensions and period) is the specific Formia ancient heritage monument.

Formia's other specific quality: it is the most accessible town on the Gaeta gulf coast for the specific combination of ancient heritage, beach access, and bufala mozzarella purchase that makes the southern Lazio coastal route from Rome one of the most rewarding day-trips or overnight destinations available from the capital. The Gaeta gulf (the protected bay between the Circeo promontory to the north and the Gaeta promontory to the south) has the cleanest water and the most specific coastal landscape of the Lazio Tyrrhenian coast.

Formia: Heritage, Beach, and Food

The Tomb of Cicero and the Ancient Via Appia

The "Tomba di Cicerone" (the ancient tower tomb on the Via Appia 3km north of Formia, visible from the road as a cylindrical structure approximately 12m diameter and 10m surviving height, built of opus reticulatum — the diamond-pattern brick facing characteristic of late Republican and early Imperial Roman construction) is the most specifically emotionally resonant ancient monument on the southern Lazio coast: standing at the tomb of the greatest Latin prose writer at the exact point where the Roman Republic effectively ended (Cicero's death on December 7, 43 BC is the specific date that closes the age of Republican free speech) is an experience whose historical weight no reconstruction or museum presentation can replicate. The access is direct from the roadside; no ticket, no guided visit.

The Gaeta Gulf and Formia Beach

The Formia coast (the town beach and the beaches of the Gianola municipal park, 3km south of the town center — the natural promontory park with the Roman Villa of Munazio Planco, the consul who proposed Caesar's deification, built directly on the sea cliff) is the most accessible high-quality beach stretch in southern Lazio for visitors based in Rome. The Gianola park beach (free access within the municipal park) is the specific alternative to the paid stabilimenti of the Formia town beach.

Q&A: Formia

Is Formia worth a day trip from Rome specifically?

Yes — for the specific combination of the Tomb of Cicero (45 minutes), the Gianola park beach (2-3 hours), and a lunch of fresh bufala mozzarella and Gaeta olives (from the market on Via Anfiteatro or the caseificio on the Formia-Gaeta coast road). The train from Roma Termini to Formia takes 1.15-1.30 hours (Intercity or regional service, frequent departures). The Formia day trip combines better with an overnight in Gaeta (5km north) for a two-day southern Lazio coast circuit.

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