Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Via del Corso
Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Via del Corso
The Via del Corso, is a main street in the historical centre of Rome. It is remarkable for being absolutely straight in an area characterized by narrow meandering alleys and small piazzas. Considered a wide street in ancient times, today the Corso is approximately 10 metres wide, and it only has room for two lanes of traffic and two narrow sidewalks. The northern portion of the street is a pedestrian area. The length of the street is roughly 1.5 kilometres.
The Corso runs in a generally north-south direction. To the north, it links the northern entrance gate to the city, the Porta del Popolo and its piazza, the Piazza del Popolo, to the heart of the city at the Piazza Venezia, at the base of the Capitoline Hill. At the Piazza del Popolo, Via del Corso is framed by two Baroque churches, Santa Maria dei Miracoli and Santa Maria in Montesanto, and along the street are the church of San Carlo al Corso, the church of San Giacomo in Augusta, the church of Gesù e Maria, the Piazza Colonna with the ancient column of Marcus Aurelius, the Galleria Alberto Sordi, the church of Santa Maria in Via Lata, the Oratory of Santissimo Crocifisso, the church of San Marcello al Corso and the Palazzo Doria Pamphili.
From the fifteenth century, the road served as the racetrack during the Roman Carnival for an annual running of riderless horses called the corsa dei barberi, which is the source for the name Via del Corso. Today, the Corso is a popular place for the passeggiata, the evening stroll for the populace to be seen and to see others. It is also an important shopping street for tourists and locals alike.
The history of Via del Corso began in 220 BC when Gaius Flaminius censor built a new road to link Rome with the Adriatic Sea in the north. The starting point of the road was Porta Fontinalis, a gate in the Servian city walls near present-day Piazza Venezia. In its first miles Via Flaminia cut through the plain between the Tiber and the eastern hills in a straight line. The Field of Mars, as it was called, was at the time used as a training ground and pasture. Numerous tombs must have lined the road similarly to the Appian Way.
The most important ancient monuments along Via Lata were Aurelian's Temple of the Sun, the Ara Pacis, the Ustrinum Domus Augustae, the Ara Providentiae and the Column of Marcus Aurelius. A densely populated residential quarter from the Hadrianic era was discovered on the right side of the road between Via delle Muratte and Via delle Convertite. With the building of the Aurelian Walls (AD 271-75) the whole area was incorporated into the city of Rome, and a new city gate (Porta Flaminia) was erected at present-day Piazza del Popolo where the road left the urban territory.
From the fifteenth century, the Via del Corso became a fashionable street for new or renovated churches and new palaces for the nobility. However, by the mid seventeenth century, the street remained a mixture of different scales and architectural styles, some unfashionable, a number of churches lacked facades and some buildings were a combination of structures from different periods or were simply incomplete.
The Corso was also tied to Alexander’s intentions to impress significant dignitaries paying official visits to the city. The Porta del Popolo was reworked and the Piazza del Popolo cleared. The two Baroque churches facing onto the Piazza marked perpectivised vistas along the Via del Babuino to the left, the Via di Ripetta to the right and at the centre, the straightened and regularized Via del Corso leading to the Piazza Venezia. This complex of streets is known as Tridente.
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PIAZZA COLONNA
From Wikipedia:
Piazza Colonna is a piazza at the center of the Rione of Colonna in the historic heart of Rome, Italy. It is named for the marble Column of Marcus Aurelius which has stood there since 193 CE. The bronze statue of Saint Paul that crowns the column was placed in 1589, by order of Pope Sixtus V. The Roman Via Lata (now the Via del Corso) runs through the piazza's eastern end, from south to north.
The piazza is rectangular. Its north side is taken up by Palazzo Chigi, formerly the Austro-Hungarian empire's embassy, but is now a seat of the Italian government.
Via del Corso
The Via del Corso, is a main street in the historical centre of Rome. It is remarkable for being absolutely straight in an area characterized by narrow meandering alleys and small piazzas. Considered a wide street in ancient times, today the Corso is approximately 10 metres wide, and it only has room for two lanes of traffic and two narrow sidewalks. The northern portion of the street is a pedestrian area. The length of the street is roughly 1.5 kilometres.
The Corso runs in a generally north-south direction. To the north, it links the northern entrance gate to the city, the Porta del Popolo and its piazza, the Piazza del Popolo, to the heart of the city at the Piazza Venezia, at the base of the Capitoline Hill. At the Piazza del Popolo, Via del Corso is framed by two Baroque churches, Santa Maria dei Miracoli and Santa Maria in Montesanto, and along the street are the church of San Carlo al Corso, the church of San Giacomo in Augusta, the church of Gesù e Maria, the Piazza Colonna with the ancient column of Marcus Aurelius, the Galleria Alberto Sordi, the church of Santa Maria in Via Lata, the Oratory of Santissimo Crocifisso, the church of San Marcello al Corso and the Palazzo Doria Pamphili.
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Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Via Nazionale
Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Via Nazionale
Via Nazionale is a street in Rome from Piazza della Repubblica leading towards Piazza Venezia. Already begun as via Pia, named in honour of Pius IX, who had wanted to connect Stazione Termini to the city-centre, the street was completed at the end of the 19th century through the ambition of several figures of the Risorgimento to create a new Rome as a capital of the unified Kingdom of Italy.
The enlargement of this artery was necessary to create a link between Rome's central station and the most populous part of the city, and the new road was extended to the east bank of the river Tiber by the Corso Vittorio Emanuele II.
However, the construction works ripped the heart out of the city by demolishing buildings in its path (including palazzi such as the National Dramatic Theatre), which substantially modified the previous street's route. On it are to be found:
Palazzo delle Esposizioni (1883)
Palazzo Koch - site of the Banca d'Italia (1892)
The 17th-century Roman Villa Aldobrandini, whose gardens were truncated by the construction of Via Nazionale in the 19th century.
Largo Angelicum off of which is found the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum
Santa Caterina a Magnanapoli
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Rome Walking Tour (No Captions) 15 Miles
Click on a time link below to skip to your desired location and enjoy a 15 mile walk around the Eternal City of Rome. This walk does not include maps or captions.
00:00 - Porta del Popolo
01:28 - Piazza del Popolo
04:07 - Via del Corso
12:25 - Piazza di Spagna
13:18 - The SPANISH STEPS
18:44 - Basilica di Sant'Andrea delle Fratte
25:00 - TREVI FOUNTAIN
29:58 - Column of Marcus Aurelius
40:00 - The PANTHEON
55:04 - PIAZZA NAVONA
58:48 - Pasquino (Talking Statue)
1:05:11 - Via dei Coronari
1:11:26 - Ponte Sant'Angelo
1:11:56 - Castel Sant'Angelo
1:21:18 - ST. PETER'S SQUARE
1:23:45 - St. Peter's Basilica
1:29:53 - Porto Santo Spirito
1:36:24 - Walk along the Tiber River
1:42:02 - Ponte Sisto Bridge
1:48:16 - CAMPO DE' FIORI
2:01:23 - Largo di Torre Argentina
2:09:31 - THEATER OF MARCELLUS
2:10:40 - Temple of Apollo Sosiano
2:12:20 - Porticus Octaviae
2:15:57 - Ponte Fabricio
2:16:57 - Tiber Island
2:18:36 - Ponte Cestio
2:20:05 - Ponte Palatino
2:24:16 - THE MOUTH OF TRUTH
2:26:51 - CIRCUS MAXIMUS
2:36:16 - Forum Boarium
2:36:31 - Temple of Hercules Victor
2:37:13 - Temple of Portunus
2:44:10 - Capitoline Hill
2:44:47 - Basilica Dell'Ara Coeli
2:50:12 - Cordonata Stairs
2:50:58 - Campidoglio
2:51:35 - Palazzo Senatorio
2:52:44 - Roman Forum Viewpoint
2:59:16 - Altar of the Fatherland
3:03:58 - Athenaeum of Hadrian
3:05:21 - Trajan's Column
3:05:44 - Trajan's Forum
3:07:43 - Trajan's Market
3:10:34 - Temple of Venuc Genetrix (Forum of Caesar)
3:11:21 - Clivus Argentarius
3:12:34 - Arch of Septimius Severus
3:14:30 - Roman Forum
3:15:09 - Basilica di Santi Luca e Martina
3:20:43 - Mamertine Prison/Church of San Giuseppe dei Falegnami
3:24:18- Forum of Caesar
3:28:14 - Forum of Nerva
3:28:53 - Forum of Augustus
3:29:18 - Temple of Mars Ultor
3:31:34 - Via dei Fori Imperiali
3:32:54 - The Church of Saints Cosmas and Damian
3:36:36 - Temple of Romulus(inside)
3:41:33 - Basilica of Maxentius
3:43:50 - COLOSSEUM
3:46:49 - Meta Sudans
3:47:49 - ARCH OF CONSTANTINE
3:53:32 - Oppian Hill Park
4:11:19 - Borgia Stairs
4:12:00 - Piazza di San Pietro in Vincoli
4:17:33 - The Capocci Tower
4:22:06 - Basilica of Saint Mary Major
4:25:14 - Piazza dell'Esquilino
4:30:02 - ROMA TERMINI
4:34:19 - Baths of Diocletian
4:35:48 - Piazza della Repubblica
4:36:33 - The Basilica of St. Mary of the Angels and the Martyrs
4:44:26 - Fountain of Moses
4:45:13 - Saint Mary of Victory
4:53:52 - Garden of St. Andrea
4:59:54 - Piazza del Quirinale
5:00:53 - Quirinale Palace
5:06:14 - Trevi Fountain
5:12:09 - Piazza di San Silvestro
5:17:41 - Piazza Mignanelli
5:19:00 - Spanish Steps
5:22:12 - Top of the Spanish Steps
5:23:40 - Trinita dei Monti
5:35:30 - Mausoleum of Augustus
5:36:56 - Ara Pacis (Altar of Augustan Peace)
5:49:05 - Piazza del Popolo
5:50:05 - Porta del Popolo
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Piazza Colonna, Rome
Piazza Colonna is a piazza at the center of the Rione of Colonna in the historic heart of Rome, Italy. It is named for the marble Column of Marcus Aurelius which has stood there since 193 CE. The bronze statue of Saint Paul that crowns the column was placed in 1589, by order of Pope Sixtus V. The Roman Via Lata (now the Via del Corso) runs through the piazza's eastern end, from south to north.
Holiday Inn Express Rome East **** Hotel Review 2017 HD, Prenestino, Italy
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Located in Rome (Tiburtina EST), Holiday Inn Express Rome - East is close to Piazza Bologna and Porta Maggiore. This 4-star hotel is within the vicinity of Happio and Villa Torlonia.
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Rome walk lunch Trevi dinner 2012
We're starting out our journey to Europe at the Rome airport. It's a modern facility so it's really quite easy to get from your airplane to baggage claim. Of course, it takes a while to fly to Europe, but we've speed things up here and we have arrived in the blink of an eye. After a brief rest were eager to see the city.
Here's Sant Andrea Della Valle, with the second highest dome in the city, after St. Peter's. Inside the church it's a chance to look at these incredible artworks on display. Back in the Middle Ages, then onto the Renaissance and the Baroque, the church was all-powerful in Rome and throughout Italy and was the great patron of the artists. It has got an impressive mirror that allows you to look at the ceiling without straining your neck. You've got to get around in see every nook and cranny when you go into a stupendous church like Sant Andre della Valle. Another counterreformation masterpiece, and the Baroque style, built in the late 1600s. This church is on every corner it seems in the city. In fact, they have 500 churches in Rome.
After our visit to Sant Andrea. We worked up an appetite, and fortunately, just around the corner is the Campo de Fiori. It's surrounded by restaurants. Now granted these are somewhat touristic, but it's really wonderful place to eat. Pizzeria Virgilio was very satisfactory and look that wine. It's our first meal of the tour and already we're starting off with a bang. This is great. Everybody diving in and having some beautiful red wine at lunch. That's a good start. Okay, granted for you restaurant purists out there, you can get a better meal in Rome certainly and you can get a worse meal in Rome,l of course but these restaurants around the Campo have that one essential unique ingredient and that is this wonderful location. It's just a great spot to eat. And spaghetti is spaghetti. Really, you know there are different levels—there's great spaghetti and mediocre. Pizzeria Virgilio was quite fine, and a great place to begin our tour. Pizza was good, pasta was nice and there's great scenery sitting at an outdoor table at Campo de Fiori.
Well these neighborhoods all around are just saturated with charm and character. Your first walk should bring you into the Piazza Navona, with its picture-postcard perfect St. Agnese Church by Borromini, and the stunning Fountain of the Four Rivers by Bernini. You are going to notice right away the Roman Senate, a former Palace.
Ah, gelato. Here's a famous gelateria, San Crispino, noted for the fresh flavors that they make themselves.
Then you continue along the pedestrian alley where you soon arrive at the Pantheon. It's a perfect structure, still standing with its great dome intact after one thousand nine hundred years. It was the largest dome in the world until this century, and forms a spherical space that creates a balanced feeling of harmony. Its spherical design takes the shape of a bubble in a barrel where the height of 140 feet is equal to its width, a dome atop the cylindrical base wall. The Pantheon was probably designed, in part, by the emperor Hadrian in A.D. 125 as a temple to all the gods, and has served a variety of historical functions over its many years.
The Pantheon is situated on the Piazza della Rotunda, which has a beautiful fountain in the middle with an Egyptian obelisk. The fountain in the middle of the piazza was created by Giacomo della Porta in 1575.
Walk behind the left (east) side of the Pantheon to Santa Maria Sopra Minerva, the only significant gothic church in the city. Even though Rome has been a religious and artistic center for 2,500 years, during the Middle Ages it was relatively unimportant and produced little in the way of gothic architecture that has survived, except for this impressive church.
Don't miss St. Ignazio, with its illusionistic ceiling mural painted during the 17th century by the Jesuit priest, Andrea Pozzo. This vivid three-dimensional perspective will shock your eyes with its realistic depiction of the heavens opening above and painted architecture that blends magically with the building so you don't know where one begins and the other ends.
A few blocks away, across the busy Via del Corso, is the spectacular Trevi Fountain, made famous in the movies Three Coins in the Fountain and La Dolce Vita. It is very possibly the world's most beautiful fountain, depicting Neptune, god of the ocean, being pulled through a triumphal arch by wild horses amidst a torrential cascade, heralded by conch blowers. Here you must toss a coin over your shoulder once to come back to Rome, and once again for another wish.
Notice the busy pizzeria called Da Baffetto -- it's an expensive, tasty and famous.And then we're taking a stroll, it's getting late, the evening is descending now, and it's time to enjoy some of the city streets in the evening. It's very safe and peaceful with really interesting sights to see
Rome Italy | By Aloha Robert
Rome, the “eternal city”, is so called because it is a place of great beauty, contrast and life. Rome is an ecletic city: the religious world centre of Catholic Church, the fabulous ruins of the centre of the Roman Empire, and modern, bustling Rome. All three seem incongruous, yet they live inside and beside each other with great ease. You will soon realise Rome was build to rule and dominate the world. Everything is on a massive scale, solid and “eternal”.
The center of Rome is compact, and wandering the ruins on foot is a great way to see the city. Street life is vibrant and constant. The architectural design is consuming, and close proximity of ancient sights make for a comfortable and convenient walk. For instance, the Colosseum is approximately one-and-a-half miles from the Spanish steps. One route travels by the Forum, Piazza Venezia, and several churches, passing through charming neighborhoods. A longer, more scenic route weaves from the Colosseum to the Vatican. Most major monuments are west of the train station. The Pantheon and Trevi Fountain are a short detour away. The Palatine Hill and the Forum are the center of ancient Rome. Via del Corso runs north from the Forum to Piazza del Popola, and Trevi Fountain is to the east. The Vatican is northwest of the Forum, across the Tiber River. Small patches of central Rome have sidewalks and streets closed to cars for use by cyclists and scooters.
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Piazza del Popolo and Pincian Hill in Rome, Italy
This large square is known as Piazza del Popolo, which literally means People's Square. The name Piazza del Popolo historically was named after Santa Maria del Popolo, the church located in the northeast corner of the piazza. The church was named after the poplar tree.
The neoclassical layout of the piazza was designed by architect Giuseppe Valadier between 1811 and 1822. The design forming two semicircles was reminiscent of Gian Lorenzo Bernini's plan for St. Peter's Square.
At the center of the piazza is an Egyptian obelisk of Sety I. The obelisk, the 2nd oldest in Rome, was brought to the city in 10 B.C. by 10 BC by order of Augustus. It was originally set up in the Circus Maximus before being brought to this location in 1589.
For a great view of Piazza del Popolo, head to the east and climb up as high as you can towards Villa Borghese. When you reach the top you will be rewarded with stunning views of the piazza below.
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FINCATO - A PRIVATE TOUR. ROME, ITALY 2017.
A look around the historic pipe, tobacco & cigar store Fincato in Rome, Italy.
February 2017.
Walking Rome San Giovanni to Piazza Venezia
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Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Piazza della Rotonda
Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Piazza della Rotonda
The Piazza della Rotonda is a piazza in Rome, Italy, on the south side of which is located the Pantheon. The square gets its name from the Pantheon's informal title as the church of Santa Maria Rotonda.
Although the Pantheon has stood from antiquity, the area in front of it had over the centuries become choked with a maze of sheds and small shops that had grown up around its columns. These medieval accretions were cleared by order of Pope Eugenius IV (1431–39) and the piazza was laid out and paved. It took its name from the Pantheon, which had been converted in the 7th century AD into a Christian church dedicated to St. Mary and the Martyrs but informally known as Santa Maria Rotonda. The piazza is roughly rectangular, approximately 60 meters north to south and 40 meters east to west, with a fountain and obelisk in the center and the Pantheon on the south side.
During the 19th century, the piazza was especially noted for its market of bird-sellers, who brought their cages with live parrots, nightingales, owls, and other birds into the piazza. A traveler in 1819 remarked that during Twelfth Night celebrations in Rome the Piazza della Rotonda was in particular distinguished by the gay appearance of the fruit and cake-stalls, dressed with flowers and lighted with paper lanterns.
In the center of the piazza is a fountain, the Fontana del Pantheon, surmounted by an Egyptian obelisk. The fountain was constructed by Giacomo Della Porta under Pope Gregory XIII in 1575, and the obelisk was added to it in 1711 under Pope Clement XI.
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045 EUROPE TRIP - ROME TOUR, ITALY | June 1992
Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Piazza di Trevi
Places to see in ( Rome - Italy ) Piazza di Trevi
The Trevi Fountain (Italian: Fontana di Trevi) is a fountain in the Trevi district in Rome, Italy, designed by Italian architect Nicola Salvi and completed by Pietro Bracci. Standing 26.3 metres (86 ft) high and 49.15 metres (161.3 ft) wide, it is the largest Baroque fountain in the city and one of the most famous fountains in the world. The fountain has appeared in several notable films, including Federico Fellini's La Dolce Vita and the eponymous Three Coins in the Fountain.
The Trevi Fountain was finished in 1762 by Giuseppe Pannini, who substituted the present allegories for planned sculptures of Agrippa and Trivia, the Roman virgin. It was officially opened and inaugurated on May 22 by Pope Clement XIII. The majority of the piece is made from Travertine stone, quarried near Tivoli, about 35 kilometres (22 miles) east of Rome.
The backdrop for the fountain is the Palazzo Poli, given a new façade with a giant order of Corinthian pilasters that link the two main stories. Taming of the waters is the theme of the gigantic scheme that tumbles forward, mixing water and rockwork, and filling the small square. Tritons guide Oceanus' shell chariot, taming hippocamps.
In the centre a robustly-modelled triumphal arch is superimposed on the palazzo façade. The centre niche or exedra framing Oceanus has free-standing columns for maximal light and shade. In the niches flanking Oceanus, Abundance spills water from her urn and Salubrity holds a cup from which a snake drinks. Above, bas reliefs illustrate the Roman origin of the aqueducts. The tritons and horses provide symmetrical balance, with the maximum contrast in their mood and poses (by 1730, rococo was already in full bloom in France and Germany).
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Italy/Rome (Walking tour) Part 19/84
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Piazza del Popolo
Piazza del Popolo is a large urban square in Rome. The name in modern Italian literally means People's Square, but historically it derives from the poplars (populus in Latin, pioppo in Italian) after which the church of Santa Maria del Popolo, in the northeast corner of the piazza, takes its name.
The piazza lies inside the northern gate in the Aurelian Walls, once the Porta Flaminia of ancient Rome, and now called the Porta del Popolo. This was the starting point of the Via Flaminia, the road to Ariminum (modern-day Rimini) and the most important route to the north. At the same time, before the age of railroads, it was the traveller's first view of Rome upon arrival. For centuries, the Piazza del Popolo was a place for public executions, the last of which took place in 1826.
Fountains:The aqueduct carrying the Acqua Vergine Nuovo was completed in the 1820s, and its water provided the opportunity for fountains and their basins that offered the usual public water supply for the rioneor urban district. Ever since the Renaissance such terminal fountains also provided an occasion for the grand terminal water show called in Rome a mostra or a show. What makes a fountain a mostra is not essentially its size or splendor, but its specific designation as the fountain that is a public memorial to the whole achievement of the aqueduct. Valadier had planned fountains in the upper tier of the Pincio slope, but these were not carried out, in part for lack of water.
Fountains by Giovanni Ceccarini (1822–23), with matching compositions of a central figure flanked by two attendant figures, stand on each side of the piazza to the east and west, flanked by neoclassical statues of The Seasons (1828). The Fontana del Nettuno (Fountain of Neptune) [8] stands on the west side, Neptune with his trident is accompanied by two dolphins. Rome between the Tiber and the Aniene on the east side, against the steep slope of the Pincio, represents the terminal mostra of the aqueduct. Dea Roma armed with lance and helmet, and in front is the she-wolf feeding Romulus and Remus.At the center of the piazza is the Fontana dell' Obelisco: a group of four mini fountains, each comprising a lion on a stepped plinth, surround the obelisk.Wikipedia
Rome Luxury Suites: Babuino 181
Hotel Babuino 181 offers you the best luxury suites in Rome. With 24 rooms and suites, Babuino 181 has a perfect location in Rome, on the famous via Babuino between Piazza del Popolo and the Spanish Steps. Like each of the Rome luxury suites hotels every bit of it is as chic as its neighboring boutiques.
Step between Rome’s top fashion designers, disappear through discreet glass doors… and enter another dimension of Italian Luxury Suites in Rome. After a day of inspiration touring Rome’s sites, come back to your home in Rome.
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Gelateria La Romana, ROMA, #viajando,ice - cream ROME-Cosmo Collections
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