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| Undoubtedly there
is no city in the world that has more waters and fountains
than Rome. It has been thus since ancient times, when 11 aqueducts
supplied thousands and thousands of litres of water to the
city each day, feeding the countless fountains and magnificent
baths. The sacking of the Goths, resulting in the cutting
of the aqueducts, ended this richness, and only at the end
of the 16th century did the popes tackle the water supply
problem adequately. Since then Rome was adorned with dozens
of monumental fountains celebrating the pontiffs' munificence,
often flanked by drinking troughs and public basins for practical
uses. And today still, while we admire these masterpieces,
we refresh ourselves by drinking the excellent water running
from the typical drinking-water fountains affectionately called
"nasoni" - big noses - because of the curious shape of the
curved spout.
The theatrical Fountain of the
Naiads, one of the most beautiful fountains of modern Rome,
is the work of sculptor Mario Rutelli, who created it in 1901
to adorn Piazza della Repubblica, originally called
Piazza Esedra. |
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| The old name derives from
the fact that the square was created, in the late 1900s, following
the curved line of the large exedra of the majestic Baths
of Diocletian, recently restructured and reopened to the public.
Between the two semicircular porticoed buildings opens Via Nazionale,
an important main street and lively commercial zone. At no.
194 is the Palazzo delle Esposizioni, the site of interesting
exhibitions. |
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| The roof garden is one of
the most popular places in Rome for short snacks, lunches,
or mundane and cultural events.
The four bronze nymphs placed
around the basin of the Fountain of the Naiads were the subject
of fierce controversy, which led to the raising of a fence
to prevent the sight of the female figures, considered too
sensual because of the manner in which they were embracing
the sea monsters. The fence was removed by popular acclaim,
but the criticism did not end, so the sculptor created the
central group which, depicting three tritons, a dolphin and
an octopus, was quickly christened "mixed fish fry". The group
was transferred to Piazza Vittorio and replaced with the figure
of Glaucus Fighting a Triton.
For those with a sweet tooth
a stop at the Dagnino bar-pastry shop, Via V. Emanuele Orlando
75, is a must. It offers the best Sicilian specialities, from
cannoli to marzipan fruit. Those, on the other hand, in search
of guidebooks or other books can go to Feltrinelli International,
Via V. Emanuele Orlando 84, or Mel Book Store, Via Nazionale 255.
Often the creation of aqueducts
and fountains was dictated, more than by the desire to meet
the population's needs, by the desire to satisfy private interests
of the popes. This is the case of the Fountain of Moses in
Piazza San Bernardo, which forms the "display",
i.e. the terminal part of the Felice aqueduct, thus named
after Pope Sixtus V, Felice Peretti, who restored the ancient
Alessandrino aqueduct. |
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| This was done mainly
to serve the huge villa, which no longer exists, that the
pope had built starting in 1585 and which occupied the entire
Termini Station area as far as the Basilica of Santa Maria
Maggiore. The figure of Moses as he makes water gush forth
from the rock, an obvious reference to the pope who restored
the aqueduct, was so strongly criticised for its lack of elegance
and proportion that it became the subject of a humorous pasquinade:
Guarda con l'occhio torvo
l'acqua che sgorga ai piè,
pensando inorridito
al danno che a lui fè
uno scultor stordito.
(He looks with a surly eye
at the water gushing at his feet
thinking, horrified,
of the damage done to him
by a dazed sculptor.)
Going down Via Barberini we reach the square of the
same name, characterised by the lovely Triton's Fountain,
a masterpiece by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, who created it in around
1642. |
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| The whimsical composition,
which decorated the square in front of the palace of the noble
Barberini family (see Itinerary 11), depicts a triton held
up by four dolphins as he is blowing into a shell, proclaiming
the family's glory to the world. Up until the 18th century
a macabre ritual would take place in front of the fountain:
the corpses of the unknown would be shown there as a crier
would call for them to be recognised.
At no. 120 of Via del Tritone
is Planet Hollywood, part of the chain of restaurants opened
all over the world by a company formed by a group of famous
American movie actors including Sylvester Stallone and Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
Bees, the heraldic symbol of
the Barberini, in addition to decorating the base of the Triton's
Fountain, are the protagonists of a small but lovely composition
placed at the corner between Piazza Barberini and Via Veneto,
the Fountain of the Bees. |
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| The three insects, situated
on thehinge of an open bivalve shell, were sculpted by Bernini
in 1644, to celebrate the twenty-second anniversary of the
papacy of Pope Urban VIII. The fact that he finished it before
the actual date of the anniversary seems to have been a bad
omen for the pontiff, who unfortunately died eight days before
it.
From here starts Via Veneto,
"twinned" with Fifth Avenue in New York, the symbol of the
Dolce Vita of the '50s and 60s. |
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| The elegant street, celebrated
by Federico Fellini, is the hangout of politicians, intellectuals,
entertainers and journalists, often immortalised by the ever-present
"paparazzi". Renowned the world over are its luxurious hotels,
the Excelsior, the Majestic, the Ambasciatori and the Regina
Palace, and its famous cafés, such as Cafè de Paris, Doney
and Harry's Bar. Across from the American Embassy, a Hard
Rock Cafè has also been opened recently.
The entire quarter was created between the late 1800s and
the early 1900s, when the Boncompagni Ludovisi princes decided,
with an unscrupulous action of real estate speculation, to
divide the land belonging to their 17th-century splendid villa
into lots. Of the villa, only the Casino dell'Aurora (on Via
Boncompagni), decorated by Guercino and Caravaggio, remains,
and unfortunately it is not easily accessible.
From Via del Tritone
we enter Via della Stamperia, which leads to the
Trevi Fountain, certainly the most famous and spectacular
fountain in Rome, made even more famous by the night-time
wading of Anita Ekberg in Federico Fellini's film La dolce
vita. |
| The fountain is the terminal
part of the Vergine aqueduct built by Agrippa, a general of
Augustus, in 19 B.C. to bring the water coming from the Salone
springs, 19 km away, to Rome.
Legend, illustrated in the fountain's
upper panels, has it that it was a young girl who showed Agrippa's
thirsty soldiers where a copious spring gushed forth. Hence
the name of the aqueduct which, running underground for a
long stretch, is the only one in Rome that has remained in
use almost uninterruptedly from the time of its construction
to the present day. This is the aqueduct that supplies the
water to the monumental fountains of the historic centre,
from Piazza Navona to Piazza di Spagna.
The name "Trevi", on the other hand, allegedly derives from
the word Trivium, a meeting point of three streets that form
this little widened area. |
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| It is truly surprising
to see such a large fountain in such a small square, but the
artist Nicola Salvi, who created it between 1732 and 1762,
carefully studied the way to increase the sensation of marvel.
Indeed, he set it almost entirely against the face of Palazzo
Poli, preceding it with a little balconied scene, almost as
if it were a theatre! The artist was, however, disturbed during
his work by the continuous criticism expressed by a barber
who had his shop in the square. To shut him up, during one
night Salvi created the large basin, familiarly called the
"Ace of Cups", situated on the right-hand balustrade, which
completely blocked the view of the fountain from the shop.
Everyone knows that, if they want to return to Rome, they
have to throw a coin into the basin, but be careful: for the
dream to come true, you have to toss it over your shoulder
with your back to the fountain!
Across from the fountain
it is possible to admire the lively façade of the Chiesa dei
Santi Vincenzo e Anastasio. |
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The building, which was a Papal
Parish for centuries, preserves the hearts and lungs of 22
popes who died in the Quirinal Palace standing nearby (see
Itinerary 9): from Sixtus V, who died in 1590, to Leo XIII,
who died in 1903. Pope Pius X abolished this custom which
had prompted Belli, the famous Roman dialect poet, to call
the church "museo de' corate e de' ciorcelli" (pluck museum),
from the popular term used to refer to the viscera of butchered
animals.
Returning onto Via della Stamperia
and continuing along Via del Nazareno, we soon reach
Piazza di Spagna (see Itineraries 8 and 14) where,
at the foot of the staircase of Trinità dei Monti, the "Spanish
Steps", we find the Fontana della Barcaccia.
This is the work of Pietro Bernini,
who created it in around 1629, probably with the aid of his
famous son Gian Lorenzo. According to tradition, the unusual
fountain shaped like a semi-submerged boat was ordered by
Pope Urban VIII Barberini to commemorate a boat that had ended
up stranded in the square during the great flood of 1598.
In reality, the idea of depicting the boat as it is sinking
was dictated by Bernini's genius, since he had to solve a
technical problem: in fact, here the pressure of the Vergine
aqueduct was rather low, and it was necessary to create a
fountain beneath the ground level.
From Piazza di Spagna starts Via del Babuino,
famous for its antique shops, which owes its name to a small
fountain against the Church of Sant'Atanasio dei Greci.
The ancient statue overlooking the granite basin depicts a
supine, sneering wanderoo but the Romans, because of its ugliness,
compared it to a monkey or, more exactly, a baboon. It is
said that a cardinal, a bit on in years, would kneel down
before it in respect every time he passed by, believing it
to be the portrait of St. James. The Baboon is one of Rome's
"talking statues", where satirical pieces and diatribes of
a political nature, strictly anonymous, used to be posted
(see Itinerary 10).
Parallel to Via del Babuino runs Via Margutta
which, since the 1600s, Italian and foreign artists have chosen
as the picturesque location for their studios.
Although it is no longer as it once was, the street has preserved
a considerable charm, also thanks to the presence of shops
such as "Marmoraro", at no. 53, where marble is still worked
using traditional artisan techniques and old tools. The pretty
Fountain of the Artists, near n. 54, was created
in 1927 by Pietro Lombardi precisely to recall this peculiarity,
since it depicts easels, stands, paintbrushes, and palettes.
This original composition is one of the "Fontanelle Rionali
" series, created starting in 1927 by architect Pietro Lombardi.
Each quarter of Rome is represented by one or more objects
symbolising that neighbourhood - the pinecone for Rione Pigna
(Piazza San Marco), the papal tiara for the Vatican (Largo
del Colonnato), amphorae for the Testaccio (Piazza Testaccio),
the helm for Rione Ripa (Lungotevere Ripa), and so on - all
harmoniously inserted into their surrounding contexts.
For vegetarians who also love contemporary art, there is Margutta
Vegetariano RistorArte where, in addition to the traditional
menu, every day it is possible to enjoy a "Green brunch" while
admiring shows of young artists , Via Margutta 119, Piazza
del Popolo side (06 32650557).
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