This walled cemetery in the middle of a busy Roman suburb, contains the graves of some of the world’s most important scholars and artists. The English poets John Keats and Percy Bysshe Shelley are buried here, as are the Scottish surgeon John Bell and Australian novelist Martin Boyd.

More properly called the Non-Catholic Cemetery for Foreigners, the site contains the graves not only of Protestants but those of Orthodox Christians, Jews and Muslims as well.

It’s a peaceful place. Names carved in stone are shaded by tall cypress pines and surrounded by flowering camellias. They came here from all corners of the globe, from England, Germany and Denmark, Israel, Norway and Canada. They were philosophers, sculptors and writers, historians, explorers and architects.

Over hundreds of years, Italy attracted and inspired the world’s great intellectual and creative thinkers. Some names in the Protestant Cemetery are well-known, many are familiar. It’s a powerful reminder of the enduring legacies of those men and women who are buried here.