Religious processions were common occurrences in medieval Rome. Romans took to the streets to celebrate religious holidays and feast days, baptisms, and funerals almost weekly. The largest and grandest of the processions occurred more rarely: the coronation processions for the new Pope. On these processions, the Pope would set off on a parade through the streets of Rome, stopping to address his subjects from places of significance around the city. The processions brought people of all classes together and united and highlighted the communities, the institutions, and the monuments which it passed through, which may have been separated by the physical barriers of the disabitato and the Tiber. The tradition of processions in medieval Rome led to specific developments in Catholic liturgy, as well as significant infrastructure projects that reshaped the street systems of the city. This 7 kilometer (3.4 mile) walking tour follows that processional route of the coronation of Pope Innocent III, beginning at the steps of Saint Peter’s in the Vatican, and ending at Saint John the Lateran; the two religious brackets containing Catholic Rome. The stops that are elaborated upon are considered to be among the most significant, both in terms of liturgy of processions, and in terms of impact on the people and neighborhoods of Rome.